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ForeignPolicy

Bush Sends Another Neocon to Head the World Bank

By Sarah Anderson, Foreign Policy in Focus. Posted May 31, 2007.


The man who tried to equate resistance to corporate globalization with the terrorism of al Qaeda now takes over the World Bank following Paul Wolfowitz's scandal-ridden tenure.
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Nine days after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, I opened up the Washington Post and stared right into the flinty mind of one Robert B. Zoellick, the Bush administration's pick for World Bank president.

While the rest of the country was still in a haze of horror and confusion, Zoellick had seized the moment to advance his agenda as U.S. trade representative. In a commentary titled "Fighting Terror With Trade," he argued that Congress needed to pass fast-track trade negotiating authority as part of its support for the "War on Terror."

Having failed to sell the legislation on its merits, Zoellick had moved with breathtaking speed to take advantage of public fears and pressure on lawmakers to stand with the president during a national crisis.

In a speech at the Institute for International Economics four days later, Zoellick really let loose by insinuating that there were links between the Sept. 11 terrorists and anti-globalization protestors.

"In the wake of the shock of 13 days ago, many people will struggle to understand why terrorists hate the ideas America has championed around the world," Zoellick said. "It is inevitable that people will wonder if there are intellectual connections with others who have turned to violence to attack international finance, globalization and the United States."

Zoellick's hardball tactics worked. President George W. Bush, and President Bill Clinton before him, had tried in vain to renew fast track (now rebranded Trade Promotion Authority), which allows the executive branch to negotiate new deals that Congress must vote up or down. Anger over the negative impacts of existing pacts, such as the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), on jobs and the environment had prevented both presidents from obtaining this authority.

But the new "fight terrorism with trade" sales pitch helped turn the controversial trade bill into a test of wartime patriotism. It passed by one vote in the House of Representatives.

By fueling paranoia about free trade critics, Zoellick helped secure Department of Homeland Security funds to deploy 2,500 law enforcement personnel in Miami during trade talks in the fall of 2003. Police fired rubber bullets and tear gas at peaceful demonstrators, causing scores of injuries.

That same fall, Zoellick had aimed verbal bullets at developing country leaders who refused to embrace his trade agenda. In a Financial Times commentary, Zoellick accused Brazil, India and other key middle-income nations of employing the "rhetoric of resistance" and the "politics of protest." These countries had formed a bloc to persuade the United States to reduce its multibillion-dollar per year agricultural subsidies in exchange for other concessions.

Casting all pretense of diplomacy aside, Zoellick accused Brazil of being the leader of the "won't do" nations that were to blame for the collapse of World Trade Organization negotiations.

This time, the hardball approach didn't work as well. During his remaining year and a half as chief trade negotiator, Zoellick was unable to revive the WTO talks, which remain stalled today. His jabs at Brazil no doubt also contributed to the death of the hemispheric Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). Zoellick left his trade post for the State Department the same week the now-forgotten deal was due to be concluded.

Critics of corporate-driven trade agendas celebrated Zoellick's failures as a trade negotiator. Since he was deaf not only to the concerns of many developing country governments, but also to those of civil society groups in the United States and abroad, it was certainly preferable to have no deals than bad ones.

But is a tone-deaf, name-calling steely opportunist a good choice to lead the World Bank? The bank's official mission, after all, is to fight global poverty, not promote U.S. corporate interests. And after the Wolfowitz uproar, one might have expected the Bush administration to pick a more genteel and broad-minded successor to lead this global institution.

For more than 60 years, however, the United States has enjoyed the unwritten privilege of crowning the bank's leader. And unfortunately, despite the wreckage of the Wolfowitz debacle, there appears to be little resistance from the rest of the world to the imposition of yet another Bush administration insider. Even the Brazilian government has decided to adopt a "can-do" attitude on the Zoellick nomination.

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Posted by: JoshuaLudd on May 31, 2007 11:29 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No one figures out from the complete LACK of success of the World Bunk in getting a single nation out of poverty EVER coupled with the appointment of Wolfowitz, who helped draft the PNAC doctrine to keep all other nations of the world under US international power shows exactly what this body along with the International Monetary Fraud are there for; to keep other debtor nations in poverty????

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Gasp?! Bush appoints another Neocon to World Bank!!
Posted by: sausage on May 31, 2007 11:57 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Who woulda thunk it?

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Sheep in Wolf's Clothing
Posted by: matty848 on May 31, 2007 12:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not a bad article showing the similarities between wolf and Z, but check out the NYTimes article today praising Z as some savior when hes obviously nothing but wolf in a different
armani suit

and perhaps there is a link between anti-globalization protestors and resistance fighters abroad? what kind of link is it though? bad? good? similar attitude towards US? similar attitutde towards social justice causes? interested to hear people's comments on this..
-moi

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» The "Liberal" NYT Posted by: CatDad
» the link is... Posted by: JoshuaLudd
Zoellick was a PNACer!
Posted by: Joshua Holland on May 31, 2007 1:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He signed the Project for a New American Century's 1998 letter to Clinton urging regime change in Iraq! Don't forget it.

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» RE: Zoellick was a PNACer! Posted by: Zachria
Wolf on Rose
Posted by: JohnnyM on May 31, 2007 1:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Paul was on Charlie Rose last night for the complete hour. You could see him strain (or just refuse) to answer some of Rose's questions, and if he did give an answer it was usually political babble. You can tell he is a man not to be trusted.

Now in steps Z, with his history of babble. This reminds me of the Bolton appointment to ambassador to the UN, after he slammed it.

The picture is more and more obvious every time the US government does anything. These PNAC chumps rule by power, and they will not be denied (in their minds). They ruin countries economies, kill, use tragedies to further their cause, etc. It makes you wish the cold war still ongoing, but at least China and India are on the horizon, and they'll do more than balance the power.

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Corruption at the World Bank? Fifty years worth, at least...
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on May 31, 2007 2:11 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The World Bank and the IMF and the US Export-Import Bank and the various private economic consulting firms that interact with them (BearingPoint, etc.) all consitute a global loansharking organization, whose tactics are independent of whatever political party happens to run the US government.

The same game is played by the sub-prime lending industry: offer loans to poor homeowners at inflated rates that they won't be able to pay back - which leads to foreclosure and transfer of the property to some wealthy developer or real estate mogul.

The same game is also played by the credit card companies (like MBNA, Bush's #1 donor) who offer fat lines of credit to college students at ridiculously high rates - the goal being to saddle them with huge debts. They'll be paying off the interest for decades - and the same game is now being played with college loans.

See for example, Economic Occupation: The World Bank and IMF in Iraq

While the three-year U.S. occupation of Iraq faces a quagmire in operations, the economic forces of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank are moving full speed ahead implementing various economic reforms that will cause U.S.-based corporations - Bechtel, Halliburton, and others - to proclaim, "Mission Accomplished!" As the Bush administration touts its rhetoric of freedom and liberation, the IMF and World Bank are busily "liberating" Iraq's resources - oil and labor - and "freeing" Iraq's markets. The recent rise in fuel prices in Iraq and the subsequent riots are just a glimpse of what the future holds for Iraq under IMF and World Bank plans.

Now, we read today that Bush is pushing the "South Korea model" for Iraq - keep the troops there for fifty years until the oil is pumped dry. This was the PNAC plan from the beginning, right?

Both the corporate Democrats (including Clinton and Obama and Dobbs) and the Republicans are lining up behind this proposal. The only politicians who seem to have the guts to oppose this are Edwards and Kucinich - which is why there is a big smear campaign against these two in the corporate media... though I can't say I cared much for Don Hazen's smear piece on Kucinich the other day, either. Since when are Clinton and Obama "progressives"?

I think the mainstream Democrats think they have to suck up to the corporate powers if they want to win the 2008 election, so sucking up they are. Edwards/Kucinich would be the winning ticket, however - though I'm all for Stewart/Colbert myself.

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What the...?
Posted by: polyquat50 on May 31, 2007 3:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The Bank's official mission, after all, is to fight global poverty, not promote U.S. corporate interests."

Really? Since when? And we were all so sure it was just another arm of the US Government dedicated to protecting American interests above all others. How could we have got it so wrong?

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Once again, no PNAC connection.
Posted by: HughScott on May 31, 2007 4:14 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yesterday, I posted an angry response to an article by AlterNet editor Don Hazen criticizing Dennis Kucinich's pending participation in a Fox News debate.

My rebuttal centered on Robert Zoellick, a Wolfowitz clone and fellow PNAC member. It seemed to me Zoellick deserved to be attacked, not Dennis K.

I was also upset because in more than 200 AlterNet articles by Hazen over the last seven years, he never once mentioned PNAC by name -- the greatest threat to liberty-loving Americans since the Cold War ended.

Hazen came close in an editorial article titled, “The Right-Wing Express,” posted on Feb. 7, 2005.

In the article, he referred to Paul Weyerich and Irving Kristol as “key conservatives" in the raising of funds for rightwing Republican candidates.

Weyerich and Kristol are neocons, not “conservatives.” Weyerich, in fact, is a PNAC member and Irving Kristol, the father of neoconservatism, influenced his son Bill who founded PNAC. If you’ve never heard of PNAC, an acronym for the “Project for New American Century,” don’t ask Don Hazen.

He had the perfect opening in a December 17, 2001, article titled, “Future Tense: A Path Out of the Nightmare of 9/11.”

Stated the intro summary, “Paranoia has gripped America since 9/11, hijacking social progress and undermining freedoms. AlterNet.org's executive editor charts a sensible way to move beyond the fear and build a strong and secure nation.”

Incredibly to me, Hazen didn't tell his readers that well before 9/11, PNAC published a position paper calling for regime change in Iraq which would be supported by the American people -- if they suffered a “catastrophic and catalyzing Pearl Harbor-type event" (PNAC's words). Thus, to Bush and his neocon cabal, 9/11 was an excuse to attack Iraq, not a cause -- their prime motivation for generating national paranoia. But Hazen never made that damning connection.

Yesterday, AlterNet editor Joshua Holland sarcastically responded to my Hazen complaint this way:

”So you might as well ask why Don (Hazen) didn't include other non-sequiturs. Why didn't he mention the price of a pound of meatloaf in this article? Why no mention of the mating habits of the Blue-breasted Cockateel? How dare he write an op-ed without including a good margarita recipe? I could go on, but you get the point.”

Here’s the POINT, Joshua. My rebuttal had to do with PRIORITY, not relevance. On a Richter scale of urgency, Zoellick’s appointment to the World Bank was a 10-magnitude event while Dennis K.’s pending Fox News debate was a blip unworthy of discussion.

Another point in my rebuttal yesterday that Joshua failed to address was the importance of referring to PNAC when covering members like Robert Zoellick. Today, AlterNet could’ve have made the connection but didn’t, which is like writing about Germany’s participation in WWII without mentioning the Nazi Party.

For information about PNAC plus an alphabetical list of 225 PNAC members (called “signatories”) including stealth neocons in the Democratic Party, visit my nonprofit investigative website, FreedomCentralUSA.com.

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» RE: Once again, no PNAC connection. Posted by: Joshua Holland
WORLD BURGLARS INC
Posted by: Hal on May 31, 2007 5:14 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
“The Bank's official mission, after all, is to fight global poverty, not promote U.S. corporate interests.”

And on what planet is that true, pray tell?

This is Kool-Aid absurd as the claim that NWO “globalization” is good for the world. Or that GW Bush chose Paul Wolfowitz or Zoellick as World Bank front men (as the most obvious DC puppet since Warren G. Harding, GW Bush’s only real decisions may be off the White House menu).

The World Bank was a creation of David Rockefeller in concert with the Rothschild bank bloc out of England and greater Europe thru willing stooge World Bank/IMF “architects” Dexter White with John Maynard Keynes (Keynesian “economics” anyone?) at Bretton Woods in 1944.

The World Bank and IMF are an arrant sham foisted upon the global village by corporate cartel monopolists FOR cartel monopolists. At the top, the matter is that simple and that corrupt.

On the ground, cartel oligarch schemes and devious programs enacted thru such robber baron orgs are complex indeed. The results have impoverished millions and crushed hope across the planet as “leaders” of 3rd world countries are systematically bribed and extorted to play a game they cannot afford to ignore.

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NEWS FLASH: Bush gives Al Qaeda a new recruiting tool.
Posted by: HughScott on May 31, 2007 5:22 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Today, George W. said U.S. troops would be in Iraq for decades to come -- "just like Korea."

The comparison is absurd, of course, since (1) the Korean conflict was not a civil war, and (2) our soldiers and Marines were defenders, not occupiers.

But even worse than Bush's flawed logic, his reckless assertion of GIs being in Iraq indefinitely will inspire more Muslims to join Al Qaeda and fight the infidel invaders. Shrub deserved a second term alright. In Leavenworth, not Washington!

To learn why Dub-ya is such an incompetent commander-in-chief, visit the nonprofit investigative website, King-George.biz, the only one with hardcopy proof of White House corruption.

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Joshua Hollands's rebuttal to my comment, "Once again, no PNAC connection," and my reponse.
Posted by: HughScott on May 31, 2007 8:08 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The last part of Joshua’s rebuttal to my previous comment said the following:

"Now, let me address a few quick points about PNAC. First, while it's not common knowledge to people who watch the evening news on the boob tube, most AlterNet readers are, I imagine, very familiar with it."

"Second, PNAC is nothing but a policy advocacy group -- one of many in DC. The problem is not PNAC, but the policies it champions and the assumptions underlying them. It's a little like blaming the Reichstag for the horrors of national socialism -- it wasn't the building, it was the Nazis."

"Let me put this way: the mindless militarism that makes PNAC so dangerous existed long before its founding and if PNAC shut it's doors tomorrow, it would continue to be a problem."

"And let me try one more way: there is basically no discernible difference between PNAC and an organization like the Committee on the Present Danger. In fact, most of the PNACers have since signed on with CPD. Focusing on PNAC distracts from the rest of these barbarous think tanks.”

Here’s my response to Joshua's rebuttal:

1. As for his assertion that “most AlterNet readers are …very familiar with it (PNAC),” many NEW visitors may not be. They should know about PNAC.

2. “PNAC is nothing but a policy advocacy group.” That’s like saying the Nazi Party was merely a “policy group.” Furthermore, PNAC’s advocated policy of world domination with U.S. military power was, perhaps, even more dangerous to America's security, as the Iraq War it promoted shows.

3. “There is basically no discernible difference between PNAC and an organization like the Committee on the Present Danger” (CPD). Not true. PNAC is an offshoot of CPD which was founded in 1950 to promote anti-Communist foreign policy proposed by Paul Nitze and Dean Acheson. CPD members lobbied both the government and through a publicity campaign, notably a weekly broadcast on NBC throughout 1951.

Over 30 officials in the Reagan administration were CPD members including the Gipper. During the Ford presidency, CPD members banded together and later formed PNAC, which remained active into 2003. CPD was reincarnated the next year as Version 2.0.

Because the April 2003 invasion occurred before CPD-2 was formed, its members can deny having influenced Bush’s unjustified rush to war. Not so with PNAC members, which is why the connection is important. The paper trail of signed PNAC letters and statements is like stink on fresh cow dung. The members can’t shake it.

Finally, of 104 American CPD-2 members, only 16 endorsed PNAC documents from a total of 226 signatories:

Midge Decter (PNAC founder)
Steve Forbes (PNAC founder)
Frank Gaffney (PNAC founder)
Norman Podhoretz (PNAC founder)
Ken Adelman
Max Kampelman
Clifford May
Edwin Meese
Joshua Muravchik
Mark Palmer
Daniel Pipes
Danielle Pletka
Randy Scheunemann
Stephen Solarz
James Woolsey
Dov Zakheim

It's important that the remaining 210 PNAC signatories be tracked for the rest of their political lives. Too many GIs have died in Iraq already to let PNAC scumbags like Robert Zoellick off the hook.

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» a friendly posting tip ... Posted by: Joshua Holland
"free trade critics"?
Posted by: Kevin Carson on May 31, 2007 10:05 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How can enemies of globalization and opponents of NAFTA/FTAA/CAFTA be "free trade critics," when the things they're against have absolutely nothing to do with free trade?

Globalization is simply another form of statism. It relies on government subsidies to the export of capital (like foreign aid and World Bank loans to build subsidized infrastructure to support Western-owned factories), "intellectual property" [sic] monopolies (on which the dominant sectors in the global economy are entirely dependant for their profits), government subsidies to long-distance shipping costs, and government collusion with landed oligarchs and latifundistas whose feudal titles could never pass a free market sniff test.

What the neoliberals favor and what the anti-globalists oppose should be referred to in sneer quotes as "free trade," never as free trade.

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One fascist is out another in
Posted by: Nick on Jun 1, 2007 9:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Where is Democratic congress.

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Zachria
Posted by: Zachria on Jun 1, 2007 10:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Another missed opportunity! Another Irael First appointee. The thing that those of us in the "war zone" (read Middle East) cannot understand is how the people of the poster country for colonial resistance can allow themselves to be colonized by the foreign policy of another country. How does the state of Israel mange to set the foreign policy of the US? Why can't the most powerful nation in the world say no to the continued execution of Zionist empiricism?

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Let's not forget Zoellick's Enron connection
Posted by: linselyork on Jun 1, 2007 6:49 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Zoellick was a paid consultant on the Enron advisory board before joining the U.S. administration.

He also owned Enron shares worth between $15,000 and $50,000, which he sold after joining the administration.

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yea
Posted by: dealmeinfo2 on Jun 20, 2007 2:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]