America: U've been punk'd

Ocean Breeze

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Dick Cheney's Covert Action
Larry C. Johnson
October 19, 2005


Larry Johnson worked as a CIA intelligence analyst and State Department counter-terrorism official. He is a member of the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS).

Face it, America. You’ve been punk'd.

It is now quite clear that the outing of Valerie Plame was part of a broader White House effort to mislead and manipulate U.S. public opinion as part of an orchestrated effort to take us to war. The unraveling of the Valerie Plame affair has exposed their scam—and it extends well beyond compromising the identity of a CIA officer. In short, the Bush administration organized and executed a classic “covert action” program against the citizens of the United States.

Covert action refers to behind-the-scenes efforts by U.S. intelligence agencies to plant stories, manipulate information and shape public opinion. In other words, you write stories that reporters will publish as their own, you create media events that tout a particular theme, and you demonize your opponent. Traditionally, this activity was directed against foreign governments. For example, the U.S. used covert action extensively in Greece in the 1960s to help fend off communists. Covert action also played a major role in rallying world support for the Afghanistan mujahideen following the Soviet invasion in 1979.

Revelations during the past week about the Plame affair make it clear that the Bush administration used covert action against its own citizens. Consider, for example, the charge that Iraq was trying to buy uranium from Niger. The key event in this disinformation campaign was the intelligence manufactured by the Italians. The Italian intelligence service, SISME, provided the CIA with three separate intelligence reports that Iraq had reached an agreement with Niger to buy 500 tons of yellowcake uranium (October 15, 2001; February 5, 2002; and March 25, 2002). The second report, from February, was the subsequent basis for a DIA analysis, which led Vice President Cheney to ask the CIA for more information on the matter. That request led to the CIA asking Ambassador Joe Wilson to go check out the story in Niger.

We learned last May that in the summer of 2002, the Bush administration told our British allies that they would "fix the facts" around the intelligence. In other words, the United States sought to manufacture a case that Iraq was trying to build a nuclear capability. Note, not only did bogus intelligence reports and fabricated documents surface, but senior administration officials—Condoleezza Rice and Vice President Cheney—went to great lengths to try to convince Americans that the United States would soon face the wrath of Iraqi attacks. Remember the smoking mushroom cloud?

Despite repeated attempts by the Italian intelligence service to help us cook the books, the senior CIA intelligence analysts resisted the administration’s effort to sell the bogus notion that Iraq was trying to buy uranium in Niger. Even in the much-maligned October 2002 National Intelligence Estimate, the entire intelligence community remained split on the reliability of the Iraq/Niger claim. During briefings subsequent to the publication of the NIE, senior CIA officials repeatedly debunked the claim that Iraq was trying to buy uranium. They also dismissed as unreliable reports from Great Britain, which also were derived from the faulty Italian intelligence reports.

It is now clear that Italy’s intelligence service, SISME, had a hand in producing the forged documents delivered to the U.S. Embassy in Rome in early October 2003 that purported to show a deal with Niger to buy uranium. Many in the intelligence community are convinced that a prominent neocon with longstanding ties to SISME played a role in the forgery. The truth of that proposition remains to be proven. This much is certain: Either SISME or someone with ties to SISME helped forge and circulate those documents, which some tried to use to bolster the case to go to war with Iraq.

Although some in the intelligence community, specifically analysts at the Defense Intelligence Agency and the Department of Energy, believed the report, the intelligence community as a whole did not put much stock in the reports and forged documents, and repeatedly told policy makers that these reports were not reliable. Yet the Bush administration ignored the intelligence community on these questions, and senior policymakers—like Vice President Cheney—persisted in trying to make the fraudulent case.

Two weeks before President Bush spoke the infamous 16 words in the January 2003 State of the Union speech, the Department of Defense was fanning the flames about Iraq’s alleged Nigerien uranium shopping trip. Starting in late 2001, senior Department of Defense officials, including Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz and Doug Feith, provided favored military talking heads with talking points and briefings to reinforce messages the administration wanted the public to remember.

One of those who frequently attended these affairs, Robert Maginnis, a former Army officer and now a commentator for Fox News and the Washington Times , published an op-ed on January 15, 2003, for United Press International, subsequent to one of the briefings. In writing about the case for attacking Iraq, Maginnis affirmed that Saddam, “failed to explain why Iraq manufactures fuels suited only for a class of missile that it does not admit to having and why it sought to procure uranium from the African nation of Niger.”

Notwithstanding repeated efforts by intelligence analysts to downplay these intelligence reports as unreliable, DOD officials fanned the flames. This, my friends, is one example of “cooking intelligence.” These facts further expose as farce the Bush administration’s effort to blame the CIA for the misadventure in Iraq. We did not go to war in Iraq primarily because of bad intelligence and bad analysis by the CIA. The Bush administration started a war of choice.

While CIA did make mistakes, and while some key members of the National Intelligence Council were willing to drink the neocon Kool-Aid and go along with the White House, when it came to questions of whether Iraq was buying uranium in Niger or if Saddam was working with bin Laden, CIA and INR analysts consistently got it right and told the administration what they did not want to hear. It was policymakers, such as Vice President Dick Cheney, NSC Chief Condoleezza Rice and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, who ignored what the analysts were saying and writing.

The evidence of the White House effort to manipulate and shape U.S. public opinion is now overwhelming. Just last week, President Bush appeared in a pathetic scripted “dialogue” with hand-selected U.S. troops. We also know that male escort Jeff Gannon Guckert was granted special access to White House press briefings and that pundits like Armstrong Williams sold themselves to the White House. The Bush administration had an organized campaign to manipulate the U.S. media to get its message out. Unfortunately, the corporate media played along.

The attack on Valerie Plame Wilson was not an isolated incident. It was part of a broader pattern of manipulation and deceit. But this was not done for the welfare of U.S. national security. Instead, we find ourselves confronted by an unprecedented level of terrorist attacks and a deteriorating military situation in Iraq. At the same time, we now know that the Bush administration gladly sacrificed an undercover intelligence officer in order to keep up the pretense that the war in Iraq was all about weapons of mass destruction.

Americans have died because of the Bush deceit. The unmasking of Valerie Plame was not an odd occurrence. It was part of a pattern of deliberate manipulation and disinformation. At the end of the day, American men and women have died because of this lie. It is up to the American people to hold the Bush administration accountable for these actions.
 

Ocean Breeze

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'Bad omens' for the White House

By Justin Webb
BBC News, Washington


This is a jittery week in Washington.

On top of all President George W Bush's other political worries and woes is the looming prospect that two of his most trusted and powerful advisers might be forced to resign and face criminal charges.


The Bush administration is said to be expecting the worst
Mr Bush's closest political aide, Karl Rove, and Vice-President Dick Cheney's chief of staff, Lewis Libby, are going to know their fate within the next few days as a special prosecutor finishes his work.

The case goes back to the summer of 2003, when the identity of a serving CIA officer, Valerie Plame, was leaked to journalists.

The Bush team had been engaged in political combat with Ms Plame's husband, a former ambassador who had criticised the president over Iraq.

A special prosecutor was appointed to determine whether this was a deliberate leak, which would have been a criminal offence.

Mr Rove and Mr Libby testified before a grand jury and that was that - until, under legal pressure, journalists who had been the beneficiaries of the leaks named their sources to the prosecutor and his grand jury.

'Confidence'

That seems to be the nub of the problem now - that the journalists might have revealed things that the officials had not mentioned.

"There's been nothing, absolutely nothing, brought to our attention to suggest any White House involvement, and that includes the vice-president's office as well," White House spokesman Scott McClellan said two years ago.

How different Mr McClellan sounds these days - responding for instance to the simple question: Does the president have confidence in Karl Rove?


It is not clear if Mr Bush still has confidence in Mr Rove
"What I said previously still stands. You can go back and look at it - I'd be glad to show you the transcript when that question came up last time."

He does have full confidence?

"We've already addressed that."

Why, if you've addressed it, why can't you repeat it for me?

"Why do you have to keep asking a question then that I've already answered when..."

Former Watergate prosecutor Richard Ben-Veniste says the demand for extra testimony from Mr Rove last week suggests that he is in trouble.

"The fact that he spent over four hours in the grand jury indicates a great deal of scepticism," Mr Ben-Veniste said.

"In the first or second or third appearances before the grand jury he was not entirely candid, and in fact made broad statements that are now proved to be inaccurate or untruthful. He's got a real problem."


Vice-president's man

But Mr Rove is not alone. Judith Miller - a New York Times journalist - originally went to prison rather than reveal her source. But this month she did name him: Lewis Libby, the vice-president's chief of staff.

Ms Miller's lawyer, Bob Bennett, says that Mr Libby's fate depends on whether he told the truth when he testified.

"Much would depend upon what Mr Libby said to the grand jury. If he said that he had not talked to Judy about these things or didn't talk about the wife, then he's got a problem."

They expect the worst now - I believe that both Libby and Rove will be indicted

Journalist William Kristol

Even friends of the administration acknowledge that the omens are not good.

William Kristol - a journalist with impeccable White House connections - said: "They expect the worst now."

"I believe that both Libby and Rove will be indicted - not for what the original referral was about but for some combination of disclosing classified information or perhaps failing to be fully candid with federal investigators or with the grand jury."

That would be a very big deal indeed, which is why the famously cool Bush White House is sweating profusely.

Columnist Joe Klein chronicled the chaos caused by the legal and ethical travails of the Clinton administration, and he sees it happening all over again.

"There is a kind of paralysis that has infected everything - their decisions on Iraq, their decisions on Katrina. We have been here before during the Clinton years, and it's kind of shocking to me that we're back with special prosecutors again."

The prosecutor in this case will issue his report any day now. Mr Bush's presidency is already in a mess, and criminal indictments could all but finish it off.

slippery slopes....
 

Ocean Breeze

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Main page content:
Cheney 'cabal' hijacked US foreign policy
By Edward Alden in Washington
Published: October 20 2005 00:00 | Last updated: October 20 2005 00:19

Vice-President Dick Cheney and a handful of others had hijacked the government's foreign policy apparatus, deciding in secret to carry out policies that had left the US weaker and more isolated in the world, the top aide to former Secretary of State Colin Powell claimed on Wednesday.


In a scathing attack on the record of President George W. Bush, Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, chief of staff to Mr Powell until last January, said: “What I saw was a cabal between the vice-president of the United States, Richard Cheney, and the secretary of defense, Donald Rumsfeld, on critical issues that made decisions that the bureaucracy did not know were being made.

“Now it is paying the consequences of making those decisions in secret, but far more telling to me is America is paying the consequences.”


Transcript: Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson
Click here

Mr Wilkerson said such secret decision-making was responsible for mistakes such as the long refusal to engage with North Korea or to back European efforts on Iran.

It also resulted in bitter battles in the administration among those excluded from the decisions.

“If you're not prepared to stop the feuding elements in the bureaucracy as they carry out your decisions, you are courting disaster. And I would say that we have courted disaster in Iraq, in North Korea, in Iran.”

The comments, made at the New America Foundation, a Washington think-tank, were the harshest attack on the administration by a former senior official since criticisms by Richard Clarke, former White House terrorism czar, and Paul O'Neill, former Treasury secretary, early last year.

Mr Wilkerson said his decision to go public had led to a personal falling out with Mr Powell, whom he served for 16 years at the Pentagon and the State Department.

“He's not happy with my speaking out because, and I admire this in him, he is the world's most loyal soldier."

Among his other charges:

■ The detainee abuse at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere was “a concrete example” of the decision-making problem, with the president and other top officials in effect giving the green light to soldiers to abuse detainees. “You don't have this kind of pervasive attitude out there unless you've condoned it.”

■ Condoleezza Rice, the former national security adviser and now secretary of state, was “part of the problem”. Instead of ensuring that Mr Bush received the best possible advice, “she would side with the president to build her intimacy with the president”.

■ The military, particularly the army and marine corps, is overstretched and demoralised. Officers, Mr Wilkerson claimed, “start voting with their feet, as they did in Vietnam. . . and all of a sudden your military begins to unravel”.

Mr Wilkerson said former president George H.W. Bush “one of the finest presidents we have ever had” understood how to make foreign policy work. In contrast, he said, his son was “not versed in international relations and not too much interested in them either”.

“There's a vast difference between the way George H.W. Bush dealt with major challenges, some of the greatest challenges at the end of the 20th century, and effected positive results in my view, and the way we conduct diplomacy today.”

www.newamerica.net
 

Ocean Breeze

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Tomgram: Facing a Nameless War


Name That War
By Tom Engelhardt

In September 2001, the President announced that we were at war with terrorism. It was to be a conflict far longer than World War II, a titanic generational struggle more in line with the Cold War in its prospective length. It was a war that naturally deserved a name. Administration officials promptly gave it the somewhat less than sonorous, slightly tongue-twisting label of the Global War on Terrorism, which translated quickly into the inelegant acronym GWOT. That name would be used endlessly in official pronouncements, news conferences, and interviews, but never quite manage to catch on with the public. So somewhere along the line, administration officials and various neocon allies began testing out other monikers -- among them, World War IV, the Long War, and the Millennium War -- none of which ever got the slightest bit of traction.

In the meantime, the President launched his war of choice in Iraq, an invasion given the soaring name Operation Iraqi Freedom. What followed -- from the days of unrestrained looting after Baghdad fell to the present violent and chaotic moment -- has gone strangely nameless. Perhaps this was because the administration had been so certain that the invasion would shock-and-awe sufficiently to be the end of it, or perhaps because Operation Iraqi Occupation (to pick a name) ran so against the idea that we were liberating the Iraqi people. Instead, well into our third year of combat in Iraq, we find ourselves in an unnamed war -- rarely even called the Iraq War -- spiraling into nowhere. Just in the last week, 23 American soldiers died in combat; the American Air Force was let loose to bomb parts of the city of Ramadi and environs, bombings in which children died; mortars fell in Baghdad's Green Zone; and numerous Iraqis including 6 Shiite factory workers, 3 election commission officials, and 2 bodyguards of the governor of Anbar Province died in drive-by shootings or attacks of various sorts.

And yet none of this has a name. Perhaps the namelessness acted as a distancing mechanism, one of a number that, for long periods, have allowed the war to fall out of the headlines as well as American consciousness, while the dead and wounded (unless killed in staggering numbers on any given day) head for the deep middle of the newspaper. As the British in imperial days once dealt at arm's length with endless border wars in distant lands while life continued at home, so perhaps Americans responded to this nameless war once it turned sour. What makes this so strange, however, is that the particular "borderland," the global periphery, the Bush administration picked for its war lay, of course, right smack in the middle of the oil heartlands of an increasingly energy-thirsty planet. Under the circumstances, it may be worth taking a moment to consider what names might be applied to our war in Iraq and what they might reveal about our situation.

The Precipice War?

"Publicly, administration officials hailed the result but privately some officials acknowledged that the road ahead is still very difficult, especially because Sunni Arab voters appeared to have rejected the constitution by wide margins. As one official put it, every time the administration appears on the edge of a precipice, it manages to cobble together a result that allows it to move on to the next precipice."

The edge of a precipice -- an image offered to the Washington Post's Glenn Kessler by one of those anonymous officials who always seem so omnipresent in Washington, and included in a post-Iraqi-election piece headlined, For U.S., a Hard Road Is Still Ahead in Iraq. (Is that the hard road to or from the precipice?)

There have been a number of moments in the history of the American occupation of Iraq that might, in retrospect, be labeled "precipice" moments but, at the time, were hailed as "turning points" or "tipping points." These would include the killing of Saddam's sons in July 2003; the capture of Saddam in December 2003; the "turning over of sovereignty" to Iraqis in June 2004; and, of course, the "purple finger" election of January 30, 2005. The last two -- part of a larger pattern of official prediction -- were preceded by carefully choreographed administration warnings that the weeks leading up to the event would see heightened violence as the "terrorists" or insurgents tried to stop the Iraqi people from reaching the promised land of sovereignty and/or democracy. As each "landmark" arrived, it would be hailed as a tipping point in our Iraqi adventure by Bush officials in Washington as well as American commanders in Iraq -- but only, of course, until the next wave of violence arrived.

This was the Bush administration's version of Vietnam's famed "light-at-the-end-of-the-tunnel." (That era also had its "tipping points" as well as its military "crossover point," the mythical moment when our forces would kill more of the enemy than they could replace.) To the tunnel-and-light metaphor, the grimly joking response at that time was, "But isn't that light the headlight of a train bearing down on us?"

What's curious and notable about Iraq's constitutional election just past is that there were the usual warnings about increased violence (even this time from a somewhat chastened President), but the normal chorus of "turning points" was missing in action. When it came to imagery, there was only a kind of embarrassed silence and that anonymous, scary view from the "precipice."

Admittedly, in a piece on the op-ed page of the right-wing Washington Times (New Iraq unfolding), you could still find the last of the faithful, one Helle Dale, announcing, "This weekend may have been the tipping point in Iraq." But hers was a lonely tipping-point vigil. Elsewhere, when such images cropped up -- as in a Steven Komarow USA Today piece headlined Vote is critical turning point for Iraq, the image had morphed into something quite different. As Komarow put it: "But at stake are issues that could determine whether Iraq's violence and political instability will worsen or whether the country moves closer to a stable democracy." We weren't, it seems, at a tipping point, but at a previously unmentioned fork in the road. Unfortunately, Fork-in-the-Road War doesn't have much of a ring to it.

So, to tipping points, turning points, or even -- another image often wielded by administration officials -- that "corner" we were just about to turn, it's evidently time to bid adieu, sayonara, so long, bud. Perhaps we've... gulp... come to an actual American turning point in how we think about our war in Iraq? Just as all the explanations for the war -- WMDs, Sadddam's 9/11 links, liberating the Iraqis from tyranny -- have peeled away, so, it seems, has a whole arsenal of hopeful images and metaphors. They've gone onto the trash heap of historic imagery along with, for instance, the Iraqi "face" that American officials always were talking about putting on occupied Iraq, or that bicycle we were regularly going to mount the Iraqi kid on, after which we would, sooner or later, kick off those training wheels and let him take a toodle around the... dare I say it... corner?

For the last couple of years, sprayed by machine-gun bursts of hopeful administration propaganda as well as fear-inducing, color-coded warnings of terror attacks to come (all faithfully reproduced in our press and on TV), it was as if we were living inside the Bush equivalent of one of those Cold War magazines like Soviet Life produced by the other side. Now that the sheen is off and the conflict in Iraq seems unending, however, all we're left with (other than a hangover) is a nameless war and, perhaps, a creeping sense of shame.

But before we put "tipping point" to metaphorical sleep, it turns out there still is one party ready to use it in the way it should be used. Check out this headline hailing the recent election: Referendum marks turning point in Iraqi history. As it happens, that comes hot off the presses of the Tehran Times.

Actually, in a piece (Administration's Tone Signals a Longer, Broader Iraq Conflict) in the New York Times this week, David Sanger suggested part of the underlying problem. The Bush administration has just begun to admit to itself that creating its version of democracy in Iraq -- think Florida, 2000 -- has had no positive effect on the insurgency, which only grew as those turning points of democracy came and went. Now, but one "landmark" remains on the administration's calendar, the elections in December for a new parliament. This, it seems, gave another of those unnamed Washington officials the willies. He or she then whispered in Sanger's ear. "The real test may come after parliamentary elections, which, if the constitution is found to have passed this weekend, are scheduled for mid-December. After that time, a senior administration official noted with some dread in his voice, ‘there are no more democratic landmarks for us to point to - that's when we learn whether the Iraqi state can stay together.'"

So imagine, then, all those anonymous officials standing at that precipice and staring into what could certainly be labeled the Abyss War.

The Is-To War?

"Increasingly, officials say, Syria is to the Iraq war what Cambodia was in the Vietnam War: a sanctuary for fighters, money and supplies to flow over the border and, ultimately, a place for a shadow struggle."

So wrote the New York Times' James Risen and David Sanger, quoting more of those faceless officials, in an ominous, front-page piece (G.I.'s and Syrians in Tense Clashes on Iraqi Border) last weekend about U.S. military border-crossings into Syria.

If this isn't the Is-To War, as inelegant as that may sound, I don't know what is. After all, in his most recent Saturday radio address, the President quoted a letter the American military claims to have intercepted on its way from al-Qaeda number-two man, Ayman al-Zawahiri, to Iraq's terrorist of the year, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. It seems the al-Qaeda leader and the President agree that we're all working off a version of the same Vietnam-style script in Iraq. "The terrorists," said the President, "know their only chance for success is to break our will and force us to retreat. The al Qaeda letter points to Vietnam as a model. Zawahiri says: ‘The aftermath of the collapse of American power in Vietnam, and how they ran and left their agents, is noteworthy.' Al Qaeda believes that America can be made to run again. They are gravely mistaken. America will not run, and we will not forget our responsibilities."

There's a long history behind such Vietnam analogies. When the President's father was exulting in the glow of victory in Gulf War I, he claimed that defeat in Vietnam was finally in the past, exclaiming, "By God, we've kicked the Vietnam Syndrome once and for all!" How wrong he was. (By then, the Vietnam Syndrome was the way the whole Vietnam experience was summed up -- as if it had been nothing more than a prolonged state of mental aberration. It's worth noting that an Iraq Syndrome has already made its first appearance.)

Above all, the Vietnam War was never banished from the minds of our war planners and policymakers. Even when they were playing an opposites game with Vietnam (as in, for instance, their no-body-bags, no-photos-of-the-American-dead-coming-home policy), Bush administration officials had a clear case of Vietnam-on-the-brain, as did the society they represented. In 2003, while the invasion of Iraq was still ongoing, the historian Marilyn Young commented, "In less then two weeks a 30 year old vocabulary is back: credibility gap, seek and destroy, hard to tell friend from foe, civilian interference in military affairs, the dominance of domestic politics, winning, or more often, losing hearts and minds."

It came back, of course, because it had never strayed far; nor was this just a matter of the return of images or words in print. When we look back on these years, it will, I suspect, be clearer that Vietnam -- upside-down, inside-out, in reverse -- has driven the American war in Iraq. Thus, when U.S. commanders now send their troops "spilling" across the Syrian border, they do so in "hot pursuit" of insurgents -- another term (from the Risen/Sanger piece) that comes straight out of the Vietnam-era, crossing-the-Cambodian-border playbook.

And it's not just the war makers or the war fighters who have Vietnam on the brain. Even many war opponents seem to be playing by an only half-buried Vietnam script. Take the bloodbath-to-come -- the future Iraqi civil war of catastrophic proportions now featured in endless speculations and in the fears of many antiwar thinkers and activists, a fantasy (which could, of course, become reality) that acts as a constraint on thoughts about any kind of speedy military withdrawal from that country. A similar bloodbath was on the minds of, and a powerful constraint on, opponents of the Vietnam War, who long accepted that an American departure from Vietnam would lead to a terrible bloodbath there. This was a paralyzing fantasy, one which somehow mitigated the actual bloodbath then underway.

Of course, in the bright light of day, if Iraq is Vietnam and Syria is Cambodia, the analogy is a bizarrely unbalanced one. To make the comparison seriously, after all, you would have to start by saying that in Iraq the American foe is far less imposing, but what's immediately at stake is so much more consequential. The force that fought the United States to bloody stalemate (and finally defeat off the battlefield) in Vietnam was formidable indeed -- a regular army as well as a powerful guerrilla movement aided by two world powers, the USSR and China. It was politically unified, well-armed, well funded, and well supported; whereas the force that has so far fought the American military into a state of frustration in Iraq remains comparatively under-armed, fractured and politically at odds, and haphazardly funded; in short, relatively rag-tag. (In a chilling Time magazine piece on a former Baathist who prepares suicide bombers for both jihadist and nationalist organizations, journalist Aparism Ghosh offers this telling passage: "He fears [the jihadists] want to turn Iraq into another Afghanistan, with a Taliban-style government. Even for a born-again Muslim, that's a distressing scenario. So, he says, ‘one day, when the Americans have gone, we will need to fight another war, against these jihadis. They won't leave quietly.'") On the other hand, Vietnam was, from the American point of view, a nowhere, a happenstance at the periphery of a great global struggle, while Iraq is a vast oil reservoir, an essential part of the powering of any future the Bush administration might care to imagine.

Nonetheless, just for the heck of it, let's take seriously the analogy laid out by those anonymous officials quoted in the Risen/Sanger piece. The Bush administration is, as they point out, already engaged in military as well as political actions aimed at "rattling the cage" of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, much as the Nixon administration "rattled the cage" of neutralist Cambodian leader King Norodom Sihanouk (who believed his survival and that of his government lay in looking the other way as North Vietnamese troops manned those "sanctuaries" in his borderlands). In the case of Cambodia, first there were the U.S. covert cross-border missions and black ops; then unofficial "hot pursuit" across that border followed by Richard Nixon's massive, secret, and illegal B-52 carpet-bombing campaign against those borderlands (and beyond); and finally, in 1970, an actual invasion of the already wrecked country (though it was politely referred to as an "incursion").

When it comes to Syria we're obviously not there yet. The clashes remain minor; the air raids haven't started; an American occupation of the Syrian borderlands seems not in the immediate offing. (Of course, it's worth remembering that, on the other side of the border, is something a lot less impressive than the North Vietnamese Army.) Just yesterday, however, in testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice all but threatened Assad's regime with some mix of the above, not just refusing to take any of the President's "options" off the table, but claiming that he would need no authorization from Congress to launch a full-scale attack on Syria. ("[She] said that President Bush would not need to ask Congress for authorization to use military force against Iraq's neighbors. 'I don't want to try and circumscribe presidential war powers,' Rice said in response to a question on whether the administration would have to return to Congress to seek authorization to use military force outside Iraq's borders. 'I think you'll understand fully that the president retains those powers in the war on terrorism and in the war in Iraq.'")

It's clear that (in conjunction with the Sharon government in Israel), the Bush administration has long been thinking about destabilizing Assad's regime much as we destabilized Sihanouk's government. So it's worth recalling the outcome in Cambodia. While the long-awaited bloodbath never happened in Vietnam, an unexpected post-war bloodbath did occur in destabilized neighboring Cambodia where the Khmer Rouge rebel movement rose to power in the vacuum left when Sihanouk's government fell -- and then committed acts of mass slaughter for which there is no name ("genocide" being the wrong word when you murder vast numbers of your own people).

The Bush administration already blithely opened a Pandora's box in Iraq. Does it really care to go two for two by ratcheting up the pressure on Assad and then attempting a military-induced regime "decapitation" in Syria? In that void, don't even think about what might emerge -- not to speak of the fact that, under a banner that seems to read, "the Middle East for the Iranians," the Bush administration is clearing away all of Iran's enemies (except, of course, Israel). So this could certainly be labeled the Be-Careful-What-You-Wish-For War.

The For-What War?
 

Ocean Breeze

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Background noise?????

By Tabassum Zakaria
Thu Oct 20, 5:22 PM ET



WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President George W. Bush said on Thursday he was focused on doing his job rather than the "background noise" of a series of political headaches that have hurt his popularity.

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A federal prosecutor is investigating whether anyone in the White House deliberately revealed the identity of a CIA operative, conservatives are angry over Bush's nomination of Harriet Miers as Supreme Court justice and investigations have been launched into senior Republican leaders in Congress.

Asked how preoccupied the White House was by distractions, Bush told reporters he was concentrating on his work.

"There's some background noise here, a lot of chatter, a lot of speculation and opining. But the American people expect me to do my job, and I'm going to," Bush said in the White House Rose Garden after talks with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

Sen. Charles Schumer (news, bio, voting record), a New York Democrat, said the president's comments were too dismissive of serious national security leaks, and "there is nothing trivial about the investigation into the leaking of a CIA operative's identity."

"Part of the president's job is to make sure his staff obeys the laws and he should make sure that anyone indicted in this dastardly outing of a covert operative is immediately dismissed from the White House," Schumer said in a statement.

The president's top political adviser, Karl Rove, and Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff, Lewis Libby, are at the center of the prosecutor's investigation into the outing of CIA operative Valerie Plame. Plame's diplomat husband criticized the administration's prewar intelligence on Iraq.

Any indictments are expected to be announced by the time the grand jury expires on October 28.

Recent opinion polls showed the president's job approval ratings at their lowest ever in the aftermath of the slow federal response to Hurricane Katrina in August, high gas prices and uneasiness over the Iraq war.

"Part of my job is to work with others to fashion a world that'll be peaceful for future generations. And I've got a job to do to make sure this economy continues to grow," Bush said.

He added he also had to ensure there was a workable reconstruction plan for cities hit by Katrina.


........the chappy is a few lightbulbs short of a Xmas tree.
 

Ocean Breeze

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Americans :YOU have been brainwashed


Salivate, Citizen
by Mike (in Tokyo) Rogers
by Mike (in Tokyo) Rogers




"The enemy is anybody who's going to get you killed, no matter which side he's on."

~ Joseph Heller, Catch 22

Hate to break this to you, but you are brainwashed; or, at the very least, have been subjected to brainwashing all your life. It’s unfortunate, and you can deny it all you want, but you have. So have your parents, your grand-parents, and their parents, and their parents before that. So have your wife and your children. So will your children’s children and their children too. Your entire family and everyone you know have been subjected to brainwashing; some have been consumed by it; some will never get over it. It is most unfortunate that there’s not a thing you can do or say that will make things any different. The people who will get the most angry and defensive about this; the people who will argue with this the most incessantly are the most brainwashed of all.

From the day a child gets old enough to understand, the brainwashing commences. Believe it or not, I’d even have to say that the brainwashing begins from the day a baby can recognize colors and objects; from the day a baby can start to understand the relationship between signs, gestures, and their meanings, is the day the brainwashing begins. And it doesn’t matter when or whether that child was born and raised in the Soviet Union, China, Japan, Nazi Germany, or the United States; if the home and area they are raised in has any sort of government or even one iota of jingoism or patriotism, you can bet that that child will grow up with a biased view on the world. You can be sure that the brainwashing has distorted that child’s thinking. You can also be sure that the child probably will grow up with an unwavering belief that his country is the best – and will get angry or defensive if challenged about it; you can bet that child will grow up being considered a dumb-bird and ill-educated by the very few who aren’t brainwashed; and you can bet your bottom dollar that that child will grow up being a believer that his country could do no wrong, no matter what the circumstances or the facts say.

It is most unfortunate that many Americans, for the most part, will get all riled up and huffy about what I have written here but, from what I’ve seen, Americans are probably the most brainwashed basketcases in the world today. It’s really a shame that a people who believe that they are the number one and the world’s only superpower, are in fact probably the most brainwashed people on the face of the earth today.

The few who realize that what I have written here is fact, will not dispute this for a moment – they are the ones who have seen the enemy. The really smart ones or the lucky few will try to save themselves, or their kids, by getting an education outside of their country. If they do this, then they have a fighting chance to save themselves. They’ll most likely also have to learn and deeply understand a foreign language and culture before they can recognize the brainwashing. The wisest among us become wise due to years of consideration, contemplation and experience; those are the people who will see immediately that what is written here is as plain as day.

I’ve met and corresponded with people whom, I reckon, will never figure it out. They are, regrettably, the dumbest birds of them all.

"The only one to argue with a fool is a bigger fool."

~ Confucius (551 BC–479 BC) – The Analects of Confucius

Luckily for me, I figured this brainwashing business out by accident on January 29 of 1986 at about 7 a.m. Japan time (and I mean that literally). It was like a light going on in my head. You may think I jest, but I do not. It took two tragic accidents happening to make me see what years of American public school indoctrination – as well as years of American TV – had done to me. And whether you realize it or not, this brainwashing is happening to you – and your children – right now.

Here’s how I found out about it:

On December 8 of 1985, I had been living in Japan for more than a year. I was a typical proud American. Like any recent ex-pat I thought, "The United States is not perfect but it is the best the world has to offer!" (This kind of idea seems pretty typical for many Americans – especially those who have never been overseas or learned a different language or culture. A bit ridiculous when you stop to think about it.) I had finished work and come home early at about 8:30 p.m. and found my daughter sleeping and my wife uncontrollably sobbing in front of the TV set. She was very upset. I was afraid that someone had died in the family that day.

When I asked her what was wrong, she told me about a Japan Airlines 747 jet crash in Gumma Prefecture in Japan that had killed about 540 people earlier that day. It was the worst aviation accident in history and my wife was crushed. I came in, hugged her and while wiping her tears, I told her everything would be alright. At that time, I still thought that someone from her immediate family must have been on that airplane for her to be so upset, but there weren’t any family members on that plane. Just some Japanese people. I thought.

Japanese people who I didn’t know; I didn’t know them, they were not my people; I didn’t care. I couldn’t understand why my wife was so broken up about this accident. Air crashes happen all the time. Who cares? I thought. I said to my wife, "It’ll be alright, honey. You’ll see."

Oh, how cold, callous, and stupid I was. What a pitiful brainwashed American fool!

"The worst sin toward our fellow creatures is not to hate them, but to be indifferent to them: that's the essence of inhumanity."

~ George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950) – The Devil's Disciple (1901), act II

Then, not seven short weeks later, I was up early in the morning showering and shaving to get ready to go to my office job. Since those were the days before the Internet, I used to always turn on the TV – with the volume off so as to not wake my wife and baby daughter – when I was watching the news in the morning. As I brushed my teeth, I kept poking my head around the wall, to watch the day’s news.

I saw the news reports about the United States sending up a rocket. No big deal. When are they going to get to the sports? I thought. I continued brushing. When I stuck my head around the corner, expecting to see a report on something else, they were still on the rocket launch. This went on for quite a while. That’s odd! Then I put on my glasses and saw something strange. Is it supposed to look like that? I wondered. The rocket exploded in air and pieces flew off in different directions. Then it dawned on me that I was watching the news of a shuttle accident. I stopped what I was doing and got close to the TV and turned up the volume so I could hear. It was an accident. The space shuttle Challenger had exploded on take off. It was January 28, 1986 in the United States, but in Japan, it was already January 29th.

The rocket blew into pieces. I had a lump in my throat. I realized the full implications of what I was seeing on TV. I began to cry. My wife heard my crying and woke up. She ran to me and hugged me in her nightgown. She wiped back my tears and asked what was wrong. I told her about the shuttle accident. She held my head and ran her hands through my hair. She said, "It’ll be alright, honey. You’ll see."

Later as I slowly walked to the train station – the weight of the world seemingly on my shoulders as I was the only American around – it came to me:

Why did I not cry when 540 humans died in an airplane crash, yet when seven others get killed, it broke me into tears? Why did my wife cry for the 540 and not be so upset about the seven? Was she kinder to human suffering than I was? Perhaps in this case, yes. But the actual truth of the matter is that she was raised in Japan; I was raised in The United States. I was indoctrinated by US government propaganda that taught me to believe that American lives are more important or valuable than the lives of people from other countries.

Why do Americans care when two of their soldiers are killed in a foreign country – in a foreign country? But when tens of thousands of innocents – in their own homes – in their own country – are bombed and murdered by us, it is not even reported in American news? Why do the brainwashed cry when one or two soldiers are killed fighting in a country – a country that they had no business being in the first place – but don’t care for the innocent children murdered by those soldiers at the same time? Why do people care about someone whose only relationship to them actually is a government issued passport? Why don’t people shed a tear for 10,000 dead in an earthquake in that foreign land? Could it really be because of a passport? Is it really just because of brainwashing and indoctrination we have all received since the day we were born?

What a pitifully painful and disgusting excuse for a human-being I was; I had allowed myself to be brainwashed and it took me 27 years to fully realize it. But I know it now, and I will remain vigilant that it never happens to me again. Sadly, these days, I meet or talk to very few of my American brothers and sisters who seem to have come to realize the extent of this brainwashing that they’ve been subjected to. Even worse, I meet or talk to even fewer who seem like they’ll ever have the smarts to understand.

And this is truly one of the biggest shames of the 21st century: The country that should be number one in the world is only number one in the fact that their people are the most brainwashed of all.

"The American people need to find the truth and stop this decline of our country."