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The Art of War for the anti-war movement

Posted by Scott Ritter at 6:13 PM on March 31, 2006.


It's high time to recognize that we as a nation are engaged in a life-or-death struggle of competing ideologies with those who promote war as an American value and virtue.

In the months leading up to the invasion of Iraq by a US-led coalition, and for three years since, I have spent many hours speaking to numerous anti-war forums across the country and around the world. I have always been struck by the sincerity of the vast majority of those who call themselves anti-war, and impressed by their willingness to give so much of themselves in the service of such a noble cause.

Whether participating in demonstrations, organizing a vigil, conducting town-hall meetings, or writing letters to their elected officials and the media, the participants in the anti-war movement have exhibited an energy and integrity that would make anyone proud. For myself, I have been vociferous in my defense of the actions of the majority of the anti-war movement, noting that the expression of their views is not only consistent with their rights afforded by the Constitution of the United States, but also that their engagement in the process of citizenship is a stellar example of the ideals and values set forth in that document, and as such representative of the highest form of patriotism in keeping with service to a document that begins, "We the People."

Lately I have noticed a growing despondency among many of those who call themselves the anti-war movement. With the United States now entering its fourth year of illegal war in and illegitimate occupation of Iraq, and the pro-war movement moving inexorably towards yet another disastrous conflict with Iran, there is an increasing awareness that the cause of the anti-war movement, no matter how noble and worthy, is in fact a losing cause as currently executed. Despite all of the well-meaning and patriotic work of the millions of activists and citizens who comprise the anti-war movement, America still remains very much a nation not only engaged in waging and planning wars of aggression, but has also become a nation which increasingly identifies itself through its military and the wars it fights. This is a sad manifestation of the fact that the American people seem to be addicted to war and violence, rather than the ideals of human rights, individual liberty, and freedom and justice for all that should define our nation.

In short, the anti-war movement has come face to face with the reality that in the ongoing war of ideologies that is being waged in America today, their cause is not just losing, but is in fact on the verge of complete collapse. Many in the anti-war movement would take exception to such a characterization of the situation, given the fact that there seems to be a growing change in the mood among Americans against the ongoing war in Iraq. But one only has to scratch at the surface of this public discontent to realize how shallow and superficial it is. Americans aren't against the war in Iraq because it is wrong; they are against it because we are losing.

Take the example of Congressman Jack Murtha. A vocal supporter of President Bush's decision to invade Iraq, last fall Mr. Murtha went public with his dramatic change of position, suddenly rejecting the war as un-winnable, and demanding the immediate withdrawal of American troops from Iraq. While laudable, I have serious problems with Jack Murtha's thought process here. At what point did the American invasion of Iraq become a bad war? When we suffered 2,000 dead? After two years of fruitless struggle? Once we spent $100 billion?

While vocalizing his current opposition against the Iraq War, Congressman Murtha and others who voted for the war but now question its merits have never retracted their original pro-war stance. Nor have they criticized their role in abrogating the Constitutional processes for bringing our country into conflict when they voted for a war before the President had publicly committed to going to war (we now know the President had committed to the invasion of Iraq by the summer of 2002, and that all his representations to the American people and Congress about 'war as a matter of last resort' and 'seeking a diplomatic solution' were bold face lies). The Iraq War was wrong the moment we started bombing Iraq. Getting rid of Saddam Hussein is no excuse, and does not pardon America's collective sin of brooking and tolerating an illegal war of aggression.

The reality is, had our military prevailed in this struggle, the American people for the most part would not even blink at the moral and legal arguments against this war. This underlying reality is reflected in the fact that despite our ongoing disaster in Iraq, America is propelled down a course of action that leads us toward conflict with Iran. President Bush recently re-affirmed his embrace of the principles of pre-emptive war when he signed off on the 2006 version of the National Security Strategy of the United States, which highlights Iran as a threat worthy of confrontation. This event has gone virtually unmentioned by the American mainstream media, un-remarked by a Congress that remains complicit in the war-mongering policies of the Bush administration, and un-noticed by the majority of Americans. America is pre-programmed for war, and unless the anti-war movement dramatically changes the manner in which it conducts its struggle, America will become a nation of war, for war, and defined by war, and as such a nation that will ultimately be consumed by war.

It is high time for the anti-war movement to take a collective look in the mirror, and be honest about what they see. A poorly organized, chaotic, and indeed often anarchic conglomeration of egos, pet projects and idealism that barely constitutes a "movement," let alone a winning cause. I have yet to observe an anti-war demonstration that has a focus on anti-war. It often seemed that every left-wing cause took advantage of the event to promote its own particular agenda, so that "No War in Iraq" shared the stage with the environment, ecology, animal rights, pro-choice, and numerous other causes which not only diluted the anti-war message which was supposed to be sent, but also guaranteed that the demonstration itself would be seen as something hijacked by the left, inclusive of only progressive ideologues, and exclusive of the vast majority of moderate (and even conservative) Americans who might have wanted to share the stage with their fellow Americans from the left when it comes to opposing war with Iraq (or even Iran), but do not want to be associated with any other theme.

The anti-war movement, first and foremost, needs to develop a laser-like focus on being nothing more or less than anti-war.

The anti-war movement lacks any notion of strategic thinking, operational planning, or sense of sound tactics. So much energy is wasted because of this failure to centrally plan and organize. As a result, when the anti-war movement does get it right (and on occasion it does), the success is frittered away by a failure to have planned effective follow-up efforts, failure to have implemented any supporting operations, an inability to recognize opportunities as they emerge and a lack of resources to exploit such opportunities if in fact they were recognized to begin with. In short, the anti-war movement is little more than a walk-on squad of high school football players drawing plays in the sand, taking on the National Football League Super Bowl Champions.

In order to even have a chance of prevailing with the American people, the anti-war movement is going to need much more than just good ideals and values. It needs to start thinking like a warrior would, in full recognition that we as a nation are engaged in a life-or-death struggle of competing ideologies with those who promote war as an American value and virtue.

The anti-war movement needs to study the philosophies of those who have mastered the art of conflict, from Caesar to Napoleon, from Sun Tzu to Clausewitz. It needs to study the "enemy" learning to understand the pro-war movement as well as it understands itself. It needs to comprehend the art of campaigning, of waging battles only when necessary, and having the ability to wage a struggle on several fronts simultaneously, synchronizing each struggle so that a synergy is created which maximizes whatever energy is being expended. The anti-war movement needs to understand the pro-war movement's center of gravity, and design measures to defeat this. It needs to grasp the pro-war movement's decision-making cycle, then undertake a comprehensive course of action that learns to pre-empt this cycle, getting 'inside' the pro-war system of making decisions, and thereby forcing the pro-war movement to react to the anti-war agenda, instead of vice versa.

There is an old adage in the military that “intelligence drives operations.” The anti-war movement needs to develop a centralized intelligence operation, not a spy organization, but rather a think-tank that produces sound analysis based upon fact that can be used to empower those who are waging the struggle against war. Far too often the anti-war movement dilutes its effectiveness by either being unable to produce facts during a debate, or when it does, producing facts that are inaccurate, incomplete, or both. The mainstream media treats the anti-war movement as a joke because many times that is exactly what the anti-war movement, through its lack of preparation and grasp of the facts, allows itself to become.

The anti-war movement lacks organization. There is no central leadership, or mechanism to effectively muster and control resources. The anti-war movement takes pride in its “democratic” composition, but in fact it operates as little more than controlled chaos, creating ample opportunity for the pro-war movement to effectively execute a “divide and conquer” strategy to minimize and nullify whatever good the anti-war movement achieves through its efforts. The anti-war movement would do well to take a page from the fire service and implement a version of the Incident Command System (ICS) that firefighters use when fighting complex fires involving the integration of several departments, organizations and jurisdictions. The anti-war movement needs to develop its own “ICS for the anti-war” that is universally applied throughout the movement, so that an anti-war effort in Seattle, Washington operates the same as an anti-war effort in New York City, and as such can be coordinated and controlled by an overall command staff operating from Denver, Colorado.

Complex problems, such as faced by the anti-war movement, require complex solutions, which in turn dictate a flexible control mechanism that can coordinate and synchronize every effort to achieve the desired result at a time and place of the anti-war movement's choosing, and then be prepared to follow up on successes as they occur and sustain the movement over an extended period of time. It is not enough to win a battle against the pro-war movement; the anti-war movement needs to win the war of ideologies. As such it must not only prepare to win a particular fight, but to exploit that victory, massing its forces against any developed weakness, and drive the pro-movement into the ground and off the American political map once and for all.

I have indicated my willingness to apply my training and experience as a warrior in a manner which helps teach the principles of the art of war to those who call themselves part of the anti-war movement. There seems to be not only a need for this sort of training, but also a desire among the myriad of individuals and groups who comprise the anti-war movement for an overall coordinated strategic direction, operational planning, and tactical execution of agreed upon mission objectives. One can be certain that the pro-war movement is conducting itself in full accordance with these very same organizational principles and methodologies. And let there be no doubt: the pro-war movement in America is prevailing. In order to gain the upper hand politically, and actually position itself to stop not only those wars already being fought (Iraq), but also prevent those being planned (Iran), the anti-war movement will need to re-examine in totality the way it does business. I for one am ready to assist. However, in writing this essay, I am constantly reminded of the old saying, "You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make it drink." One can only hope that the anti-war movement is thirsty.

Digg!


On the religious right 'nuts,' liberals, and catching a break
A response to a colleague...
Post by Evan Derkacz. October 17, 2006.
Bush thinking of 'replacing' Iraqi government? [VIDEO]
A whole new definition of Democracy.
Post by Evan Derkacz. October 16, 2006.
Religious right rally's first gaffe
Church opposes bigoted agenda
Post by Evan Derkacz. October 16, 2006.

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God bless you Scott
Posted by: chief of okeefe on Mar 31, 2006 6:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... for all you have done to try to rein in this power-mad monster that our own government has begun. I think that the anti-war movement already has a headquarters at antiwar.com. This site is focussed ONLY on the war issue and is not a captive of any left (or yes, any right) -wing agenda.

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» RE: God bless you Scott Posted by: fifthworld
» RE: God bless you Scott Posted by: aonghus36
» RE: God bless you Scott Posted by: fifthworld
More good information, but . . .
Posted by: Knowmad on Mar 31, 2006 7:46 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
how about doing something? You Americans have certainly learned how to use the net to diseminate your thoughts and views and theories - maybe to your disadvantage, as the energy could likely be turned to more critical areas, like saving your country. I hover up here north of you and observe your reactions (sadly that seems by far the norm, reacting to perceived injustices rather than doing anything pre-emptive - god forbid) and my political vantage point perhaps allows a view of the trees and the forest. Frankly, it looks pretty dismal if you're just going to continue to whine and moan and debate one another while the enemy - make no mistake, that's what your current administration is, for sure - goes about it's pre-emptive agendae on both the home and foreign fronts. Indeed, it could be argued that one of their major goals is that eventually there be no foreign fronts.

You have to act, though I can imagine how frightening that must be, with the equivalent of the '30's brownshirts at every turn, ready to report to their masters, who just happen to be in charge of all three branches of government, not to mention the military and policing systems. However, your ambivalence and lack of guile has brought you to this point, and now you must risk if you're to make a difference, if only for the well-being of your children and grandchildren. As Scott mentions, you are in a war against an extremely dangerous and canny enemy, and words and taking offense are now simply too little too late.

As I've said many times now, find two (only two!) republican supporters and introduce them to the truth in places like Alternet and Huffington and GlobalResearch.ca, Then have them promise to at least talk to and present the same to two other GOP'rs. You have to build a grassroots groundswell (whew), to get rid of the Republican majorities in Congress and the Senate in 2006, and the White House in 2008. Then you can work on the Democrats.

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» Knowmad, you are right Posted by: Lincoln fan
» Sun-tzu Art of War Posted by: NeoLotus
My trip to the USA
Posted by: hanex on Mar 31, 2006 10:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Two nights ago I crossed the border into America. I live in a canadian town near the border and for something different I sometimes go south. As I was crossing, guilt hit me as it often does. ... "Why am I supporting this country? Why am I here when who knows if I could be arrested simply for having an alternet account! I should stay in Canada, and not support these warmongers," ect ect...

One hour into my trip I blow a tire, its 9pm, dark, and I have no flashlight. I pull out my jack, I can't see anything and I am scared, with my vulnerable girlfriend, when a middle aged man pulls over, gives me light, and takes the lead in changing my tire. Ten minutes later he is wishing me a good night.

I ask this to any Americans who have read this far... Isn't it sad that the rest of the world judges you by your politics? In truth I have had nothing but great experiences with you people, I truly think you are honest, loyal and noble people. Nevertheless I still feel bad when I cross the border..... I think it is time to reclaim your country, and that means getting up and doing it.

Just a thought.

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» RE: My trip to the USA Posted by: bansidh@citlink.net
» RE: My trip to the USA Posted by: farhada
» RE: The previous excellent comment Posted by: Daniel Shays
» RE: My trip to the USA Posted by: NeoLotus
» RE: My trip to the USA Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: My trip to the USA Posted by: douglashoyt
» RE: My trip to the USA Posted by: bhabedank
Yes, I agree with Scott...
Posted by: Chagrin-Chagrin on Mar 31, 2006 11:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
& I think that Scott Ritter is an excellent speaker that speaks well for Peace, Justice and the True American Way.
I have always thought that the Peace Movement should be unified.
Media and Message. We need to go to the people who do not come to us to listen. The ones who are open to listening are not the main problem. The Truth needs to be exposed.
We need separation of Oil and State.
We need paper ballots back.
We need almost an entirely new congress....and supreme court. How to get that is a big problem--third parties have never done well.

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» Re: Your nice sentiments. Posted by: Knowmad
» PS: .RE:What am I going to do? Posted by: Chagrin-Chagrin
What are you all looking at?
Posted by: scott balogh on Apr 1, 2006 8:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Scott Ritter and the following commenters are considerably off base!!! I do however, partially agree with you all but, I must ask questions. What can be done about the connection between war and the war industry complex? Ask them to please stop developing, testing, manufacturing, selling, and giving away weapons and the accompanying supporting goods? What can be done with religious dogma that encourages intolerance, fear and forcing their beliefs on others, and indeed, the idea that god punishes with a variety of uncomfortable options? It is not just a question of whether one supports war that is the issue here, there are other issues that are connected to a general mentality that go along with supporting war that must be addressed. Isolating war from whatever causes war is like cutting off one branch of a tree that is completely diseased in the belief that the tree will be less sick. Also, Ritters idea about how to conduct what amounts to "a war on war" might look good on paper but will go nowhere unless we cut out all of cancers that work in concert to perpetuate opression. Today, I see no other option than a revolution against all the mechanisms that are in operation to advance empiracal goals and that includes economic and religious. As long as we are free to be as ambitious as we can be there will be opression. As long as we idolize the filthy rich and famous there will be jelousy. As long as competition is encouraged there will be sides taken. I think we are sunk! The usa, canada and everyone else. Don't go criticizing another country unless you have it right and can help. We are all steeped in blood. i think there will always be plenty of aggressive people in this world and the trick is how to keep them in line. Also what to do with the unimaginitve and apathetic ones who are always willing to follow the rantings of the charasmatic, articulate but twisted ones.

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Murtha admitted his earlier mistake
Posted by: byankee on Apr 1, 2006 10:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Scott-while your article was generally quite on point, Congressman Murtha did, in fact, admit that his earlier vote to support the war in Iraq was a mistake. This was done last weekend on "Meet the Press".

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I have lost faith
Posted by: Ellie1 on Apr 1, 2006 10:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
in the American people, and especially in the American government and political system. How George W. Bushit could have been reelected is beyond me. There is no underestimating the general intelligence of the American public. And don't give me the crap about the Repukes owning the media. If you look you can find the truth. Most Americans are too dumb or too lazy to look. So we all get the half assed, lying piece of shit government that we have.

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» RE: I have lost faith Posted by: Chagrin-Chagrin
» RE: I have lost faith Posted by: scott balogh
» RE: I have lost faith Posted by: Knowmad
» RE: I have lost faith Posted by: aonghus36
» RE: I have lost faith Posted by: fifthworld
» RE: I have lost faith Posted by: yankabroad
Nothing's changed.
Posted by: heid on Apr 1, 2006 2:42 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Scott Ritter's comments are so very true, but sadly, there is nothing new here.

After the big and triumphant march against the Vietnam War in 1974 in San Francisco, everyone gathered in Golden Gate Park, where we heard speaker after speaker after speaker - every one saying something about his or her particular issue, hardly any speaking about the entire point of the march - the war in Vietnam.

I left disappointed with my fellow marchers. It started to dawn on me then that most people were merely following the popular view of the time by marching, and that those who spoke were using the event more for their own causes than for the one the march was organized.

I'd once thought that the people of my own generation were, at base, good people who cared - who wanted war to end and fairness for all. Then, the same ones who'd been hippies and alternative lifestyle people turned into yuppies, becoming the worst of everything they'd claimed to be against - and I was disgusted.

Now, though, my disgust is for the American people. It isn't a generational thing. My parent's generation did the same thing. Their cause was right and just, and they fought a world war to end injustice. Then, they turned around and joined the false vision of the nuclear family, turned women back into Stepford wives, and became motivated by pure greed, getting as much for themselves as they could - and damn those who weren't fortunate enough to have been born in the US or with the opporunities they had.

Then came my generation - the anti-war fighters and hippies who became the biggest consumers and most selfish people the world has ever known - yuppies - who waved flags of false patriotism after the World Trade Center bombings and sent their children off to a horrible war, based on nothing but greed.

From my viewpoint - that of an expat American - there is nothing new about anti-war protests that degenerate into perceived opportunities to push other causes - certainly, good ones for the most part - but not focusing on the issue at hand, and not supported by most of the protesters for any reason beyond wishing to belong to a particular group.

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Not a war on war
Posted by: particle on Apr 1, 2006 3:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just a war. War is about destruction and deception. (Forget that arrogant "creative destruction" bull.)

There are a lot of people on the left who just aren't serious about what's going on. And Ritter's point about grab bag demonstrations is spot on.

Not sure about some of the rest of it though. It's one thing to get inside the warrior mentality, another to use those methods -- even in a war of ideologies. That's part of the problem right there, treating any ideology like it's a good thing. We don't need more dogma and mind numbing systems of thought.

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He should be given a chance to use the resources available
Posted by: even(nik) on Apr 1, 2006 5:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm from the other side of the wrold but know about Scott Ritter. He's right on the mark about alot of alternative/justice movements i think. They often turn into micro-copies of the things they are fighting, that is, personal politics within the movements over status, stop any significent momentum being achieved.
Someone like Mr Ritter should be given use of all resources /networks to orgainse what he can.
That is how alterntive political movements should be, it would render "official" organisers unimportant but would let whateva participants capable, come through and capture the moment naturally.
Alternative movements have to conquer the SAME beast within, before they can conquer the one they have come together to oppose. Otherwise all the good-will gets wasted as usual and evil prevails.

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War resistance
Posted by: bansidh@citlink.net on Apr 1, 2006 8:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We could sure use a Martin Luther King , or Robert Kennedy or Ghandi atm. We are leaderless and don't know where to go with our good intentions. I am not so arrogant about ' how could the Germans let Hitler take over?' like I once was. I see how it happens. I hate it but have no idea how to stop it. Most of the people I know think I am exaggerating, so did the Germans in 1930 and look what happened.

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Anti-war Texan
Posted by: Marverick47 on Apr 1, 2006 9:36 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The basic point which needs to be made is that the invasion was illegal and immoral even if Saddam possessed weapons of mass destruction. After all, we and many of allies possess of full slate of them. Inititiating a war is always wrong. (As Kennedy said at American University: "Everyone know America will never start a war." Sadly, Bush proved him wrong.)

The only legitimate uses of war are self-defense, defense of a friend or ally, and the prevention of genocide. None of these conditions existed vis Iraq in 2002.

Starting a war is the worst of all war crimes.

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» RE: Anti-war Texan Posted by: yankabroad
Anti-war domestic psyops a necessary component as well
Posted by: kencohen on Apr 2, 2006 6:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is not only important to understand the strategy and pre-empt the pro-war factions, it is also important to understand the psychology that allows so many Americans to be so blindsided and support policies that betray their own interests. The mere appearance of an "anti-war" march, the warn out clichés and complicated rhetoric turns off the Nascar population before making any attempt to listen to the messages.
Karl Rove has mastered the art of psyops of the American public. We need to take pages from his strategy. Carville and Begala address these some of these strategies in their new book "Take It Back". Rove has been able to make Democrats and liberals look like effete snobs out of touch with mainstream values. In fact, we are exactly the opposite! In contrast, his re-tooled Republican machine has been raping and pillaging our culture and treasury for their own selfish, amoral, elitist ends.
The average Joe American needs to feel attracted to all of the psychological subliminal cues before being able to listen to the message. Bill Clinton understood and captured the attention of Joe American.
Truth has never been so lost. The ranting of the hysterical, hyperbolic, fallacious wing nuts is believed as truth. Balanced, objective and independent journalism is being lost to the new types of reporting. The big lie returns and the masses are lemmings for that message.
The Anti-war movement can only be successful if their message is heard. It takes more than people listening. Being able to keep the public's mind open in the "presentation" of the debate is as critical as the message itself.

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Anti-war domestic psyops a necessary component as well
Posted by: kencohen on Apr 2, 2006 6:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is not only important to understand the strategy and pre-empt the pro-war factions, it is also important to understand the psychology that allows so many Americans to be so blindsided and support policies that betray their own interests. The mere appearance of an "anti-war" march, the warn out clichés and complicated rhetoric turns off the Nascar population before making any attempt to listen to the messages.
Karl Rove has mastered the art of psyops of the American public. We need to take pages from his strategy. Carville and Begala address these some of these strategies in their new book "Take It Back". Rove has been able to make Democrats and liberals look like effete snobs out of touch with mainstream values. In fact, we are exactly the opposite! In contrast, his re-tooled Republican machine has been raping and pillaging our culture and treasury for their own selfish, amoral, elitist ends.
The average Joe American needs to feel attracted to all of the psychological subliminal cues before being able to listen to the message. Bill Clinton understood and captured the attention of Joe American.
Truth has never been so lost. The ranting of the hysterical, hyperbolic, fallacious wing nuts is believed as truth. Balanced, objective and independent journalism is being lost to the new types of reporting. The big lie returns and the masses are lemmings for that message.
The Anti-war movement can only be successful if their message is heard. It takes more than people listening. Being able to keep the public's mind open in the "presentation" of the debate is as critical as the message itself.

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JK
Posted by: JoAnne on Apr 2, 2006 9:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So is Mr. Ritter equating anti-war with pacifism? I don't think so, but under what circumstances does pacifism give way to anti-anti war? Sam Harris author of "The End of Faith: Religion, Terror, and the Future of Reason" contends that pacifism is immoral, making the stunningly accurate statement that a single psychopath with a knife can exterminate a city of pacifists the size of New York. Harris admonishes us that, "We would do well to reflect on Ghandi's remedy for the Halocaust: he believed that the Jews should have committed mass suicide, because this would have aroused the world and the people of Germany to Hitler's violence'. ((G. Orwell, 'Reflections of Ghandi', in the "Oxford Book of Essays", ed. J. Gross (Oxford, Oxford Univ. Press, 1949), 506.)) We might wonder what a world of pacifists would have done once it had grown 'aroused'-committed suicide as well?...Ghandi's was a world in which millions more would have died in the hopes that the Nazis would have one day doubted the goodness of their Thousand Year Reich...Here we come up with the terrible facet of ethnically aysmmetric warfare: when your enemy has no scruples, your own scruples become another weapon in his hand."

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» RE: JK Posted by: particle
Scott is Right and Scott is Wrong
Posted by: ArtJunky on Apr 2, 2006 9:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It all comes down to the media. When there is a channel on TV that people can consistantly get a "liberal" view, we will then start to win elections that allow liberals to state their views consistantly and openly against wars of choice.

Yes, the anti-war movement is everything that Scott Ritter said but it's that way for a reason. We've been taking it for 30 years now and the message coming out from our media has been consistantly right wing and pro-military.

When we on the left get a Fox-like network, liberals will come out of the woodwork. When we have radio stations across the nation that question this right-wing propaganda, we will be heard.

Should there be a call to arms, as Mr. Ritter called? In a sense, yes but isn't that just more of the same? Isn't that why we are in Iraq to begin with? Why must war be the ONLY solution?

Let's not go to war. Let's just create a media machine that pumps out left-wing propaganda that can't be ignored. Lets finally make it advantageous not to go into wars of choice.

Don't give to the Democratic party, give to a progressive media outlet that can generate the people we need to really change this world bent on murdering everyone.

Simple.

If we don't have a media that will support officials that speak their mind, we will always get get war. We will NEVER get social justice and the "fat-cats" will always win.

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Sun Tzu - "the military is a Tao of deception"
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Apr 2, 2006 10:38 AM   
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Well, I'm following Scott Ritter's suggestion. The pro-war movement is likely using a classic military strategy to disrupt the anti-war movement - it's called "divide and conquer". Anti-war should be about anti-war; it is inconsiderate and dishonest to try and use a anti-war rally for your own personal platform, regardless of what it is.

This is old hat stuff. How to best disrupt the anti-war movement? Simple - send in people who will spend all their time attacking others in the anti-war movement, while claiming to be 'anti-war' themselves. A lot of the 'anti-war' crowd spend far more time attacking others who really are anti-war. the goal is to divide and conquer using deception.

This is how Stormin Norman whipped the Iraqis back in Gulf I - he tricked Saddam by lining up troops on the western edge of Iraq, and then sent the main force into Kuwait in a rapid encirclement maneuver. Not to say that I'm pro-war, but at least the guy brought the thing to a quick conclusion with minimal loss of life. The point here is that there is an ongoing and deliberate attempt to divide the anti-war movement.

So, to counter this we need to be accepting of people from all walks of life and from all backgrounds. People who attack their 'friends' (or who promote violence) should rightly be viewed as agent provocateurs; treat them gently but don't be swayed (who knows, they might just really be crazy!). Reach out to people who aren't like you - this is the way to build trust. Also, keep focused on the central goal: the return of American troops to US soil.

Speaking of the troops, take a look at this video:
US soldiers speak out

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Chicago
Posted by: semjaza on Apr 2, 2006 10:55 AM   
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"It often seemed that every left-wing cause took advantage of the event to promote its own particular agenda, so that "No War in Iraq" shared the stage with the environment, ecology, animal rights, pro-choice, and numerous other causes which not only diluted the anti-war message which was supposed to be sent"

This is EXACTLY why I did not bother with the Answer Chicago protest a couple of weeks ago. It wasn't anti-war as much as it was anti-every-thing-we-can-think-of. There were so many seemingly unrelated ideals thrown into it that, regardless of whether or not I agreed with them, just totally took the focus off the march and effectively kept certain people out of it.

For all the organizing and street advertising they did, I think that idea alone killed it. The ads all showed the website and the idea of getting troops out of Iraq, but when you actually visit the website there's this laundry list of problems. It's more a bitch-fest than a movement.

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Hey Scott, what are you, a consultant?
Posted by: dodger2chances on Apr 2, 2006 11:43 AM   
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Scott, quick question- as one of the people prominently speaking out against the war, are you not part of the "anti-war movement"? Your blog sounds like you'd prefer to be considered a corporate consultant, seeing critical deficiencies and offering your "expertise", because of course you have the strategies that work....

Of course the disorganization, lack of one strategy, lack of centralized decisionmaking are issues none more important than the fact that many Americans are not against war, only losing war. Many folks don't see their connection to all life on this planet, many don't see the link between their suffering and anothers suffering (and vise versa). This is an issue that no amount of organizing or milataristic strategizing will overcome. Yet my friends and i who continue to speak out against the war continue our work, not to win, not to outmaneuver our "opponent" or beat our "enemy", but because peace is the path--we will continue in our work because there is nothing else to do. Simply, this work must be done.

Good luck in your consultant role. i believe there will be more constructive work when each of us recognize our responsibilty and move from that place! Keep speaking out against war, self inflicted and otherwise, my friend.

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Fight deception and folly with truth and wisdom...
Posted by: SeverelyJaded on Apr 2, 2006 12:09 PM   
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NOTE: To scoff in the face of profundity is great folly that always leads to blindness.

Here's proof that "Armageddon," the true purpose of which religious and political leaders have purposely misrepresented for centuries because they and their sources of power were the true focus of this ancient promise, is now in progress.

Most people are completely unaware that something big is currently in progress by someone must of us have will be amazed at. Consider what would happen if a true Messiah were to come forth and decisively prove that all three faiths of Abraham are purposeful Vatican deceptions based on recast and misrepresented ancient texts and mystery school delusions? Who better to defeat ancient lies than the soul they have long lied about? What if money, religion, and politics were swept away and replaced by true wisdom, cooperation, and compassion? Wouldn't that be sweet justice? Wouldn't that put an end to all of this religious and political conflict by shutting up these evil scoundrels, forever? That is the true scenario symbolized as Armageddon, Judgement "Day" (year), and the Jubilee.

Are you ready for the truth?

Here is wisdom
Verifiable proof that "Armageddon" has begun
Understanding the End Game of Armageddon

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The Only Real Battle of Ideas: Capitalism vs. Socialism
Posted by: malcolmartin on Apr 2, 2006 2:06 PM   
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Much like Charles Darwin’s immutable truths regarding of the origins and evolution of life, Karl Marx guided us through the reasons capitalism was born, why it would thrive and dominate for a time, and how its inherent contradictions condemn it to be replaced by a superior economic system. Problem is capitalism in its last throes, irrational and increasingly insane, is now armed with doomsday weapons and has created an immune system for itself. It influences culture and controls the mass media and education across a growing part of the world, places its servants in seats of political and military power, and creates philosophy and myth to glorify its own existence.

In the years ahead capitalism will take increasing advantage of war, disaster, disease, terror, and slavery to feed itself. It will seek to establish fascist regimes in the United States and other countries where bourgeois democracies have begun to hinder profits. Millions will die when the United States, China, and the European Union fight the wars for control of world markets and access to resources.

Really only one question remains. Will humanity and the planet Earth survive the end of capitalism? To a great degree, our self-preservation depends on the building of an effective class-conscious resistance here at home, in the belly of the beast. What is to be done?

First, people who know better must stop deluding the American people. There will be no more real elections in this country. The mass media and the electoral machinery and both major political parties are now fully under the control of capital. Observe the impotent and clownish Democratic Party and one conclusion is unavoidable: elections that matter are a quaint feature of America’s past. A coup brought George Bush to power in 2000 and he was reinstalled in 2004 and as long as he remains a useful idiot of the ruling clique his public approval rating could drop to zero and he will still reside in the White House. At the same time Bush is expendable in the blink of an eye if he becomes a drag on profits. He would be replaced with another everyman, a new actor and a person better able to read the script and parrot the talking points. Political dog-and-pony show aside, capitalism’s minions will only release their grip on us if and when the system is confronted by a united and organized working class in open rebellion.

To that end, we must enlist people and accept the leadership of people in this resistance without regard to race or nationality. Unbeknownst to most oppressed white workers in this country, unity with his/her African-American, Hispanic, immigrant and foreign counterparts is the only hope of human salvation. Racism and xenophobia and every other tactic of division have been the lifeblood of capitalism with good reason. Our unity is capitalism’s AIDS—the only potentially deadly threat to this system. White supremacy, Black Nationalism, religious fundamentalism, sexism, homophobia, and all the crackpot schemes and nihilistic cults of the bourgeoisie, like al-Qaeda, are dead ends for all of us.

While it has become unsafe to be rich in many parts of the underdeveloped world, the U.S. remains a safe house for people living in obscene material wealth. The handful who finds refuge in capitalist America are the human representatives of capitalism and its true guardians. They long ago declared war on the rest of us. In that war we have been doing all the starving and the drowning and the dying so far. It’s time to make it a fair fight and call out our true enemies. Rupert Murdoch and George Soros and Warren Buffet and Bill and Melinda Gates and the Walton family and all the other who appear on Fortune magazine’s annual list should be forced to step lightly as a consequence of their gluttony.

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Using 9/11 to discredit the anti-war movement
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Apr 2, 2006 9:50 PM   
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Noone can have missed the endless stories about bombs placed in the WTC, about missles striking the Pentagon, about the 'vanishing' flight 93.

These stories seem to be planted in a deliberate attempt to discredit the anti-war movement - as in, "Oh those crazy people think their were bombs in the WTC."

There is good evidence that the Bush administration believed that hijackings were going to take place, and did nothing to prevent them. The August 6th presidential daily briefing, for example, was pretty explicit, but no action (warning the airlines?) was taken. FBI field agents were trying to get the administration to take notice as well.

Clearly these attacks were carried out by a well-trained and clever fanatical terrorist group who used US occupation of Saudi territory, as well as the Israeli-Palestine conflict, as their ideological driver.

However, the 9/11 'conspiracy theories' are ridiculous. They have been widely promoted, nevertheless. The idea seems to be to alienate the vast majority of the American public as well as the victim's families - a classic Karl Rove style (read: smear campaign) PR strategy designed to divide people.

There is also good evidence that the final flight, flight 93, was shot down by US fighter jets - again, this was due to the criminal negligence of the Bush Administration. However, this story doesn't play well; the idea that the passengers 'sacrificed themselves' fits the PR strategy better so that's what we see.

This isn't a pleasant subject. The fact that Bush & Co. used the tragic deaths of thousands of American citizens (deaths that they failed to prevent but could have) for their own selfish political ends, including the needless death of many thousands of US soldiers and Iraqi citizens, piles horror on top of horror, and reveals the truly criminal nature of this administration.

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The Art of War was not written for common man.
Posted by: EricVerlo on Apr 2, 2006 10:21 PM   
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The anti-war movement comes from the grassroots, by definition without central control. Neither Sun Tzu, nor other strategists wrote for the grassroots. Waging war was never in the interest of the common man. Sun Tzu's advice was for leaders.

Would you say a grassroots mistrust of leadership might be warranted right now? We are betrayed by our politicians, almost to the last. Now is not the time to cede authority to leadership, much less to send them to a Ritter seminar.

We have to hope that the anti-war movement will develop a few leaders, or that current leaders grow some moral fortitude of their own. In the meantime we cannot do anything other than create a climate to foster ethical leadership.

To criticize the anti-war movement for not adopting the fighting strategies of its opponents is like criticizing the Democrats for not raising money like the Republicans. Where are the Democrats going to find greedy corporate felons to invest in social reform? Why should anti-war activists seek to dupe the American public about reasons to oppose war?

Stay the course, follow whatever inventive strategy will catch the public's interest, appeal to your neighbor's shared sense of humanity. Be it a pet project or an ego boost, do not shy from it, do it. Don't let nay-sayers tell you that an expert will do a better job. Stopping war has always been an expertise of the common, moral man.

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The Outer War Mirrors the Inner War
Posted by: Just Chris on Apr 3, 2006 4:13 AM   
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I disagree with Scott on the issue of tying other issues to the Anti-War movement. The issues are not isolated, but all interrelated. Poverty feeds the war machine because poor people with no economy and no economic choice are the ones that are volunteering to fight. The underlying causes of war are most often economic in nature, the politics only being the decision of which class or group gets to feed at the trough of the spoils of war and how to cover those facts up. I have a saying and it is this, whether you are red or blue, the only color that matters is green. It would serve everyone well to remember that.

The key institutions supporting the War Party are already in failure or collapsing. Endless debt cannot support the war. People are already turning to the internet bypassing the mainstream media. The two party system is in jeopardy if the War Party manages to maneuver a pro war Democrat onto the Democratic ticket. The dollar itself is under threat. Yet this in itself will not end the problem.

There is another catch as well. The outer war is only a mirror of the inner war within each of us between our light and our darkness. Without owning that darkness and taking responsibility for it, we cannot hope to end the outer wars. They will merely reappear somewhere else. The fear is within us. The doubt is within us. We all have to face that within so that the outer mirror of the world itself changes only in as much as we realize and destroy the darkness with ourselves. And everyone thought religion had nothing to do with it.

People need to start becoming aware of what is really going on. Everything is interrelated. You cannot compartmentalize reality because reality is a network of relationships between people, ideas, thoughts, emotions, institutions, beliefs, and feelings. This isn’t just about Anti-War this and Anti-War that. People need a New Vision. The vision of the world itself must be remade anew. That vision is already within them, and all they have to do if face the darkness, breathe, and pay attention. It isn’t going to come from the intellect. I know most of you still think you can think your way out of this hole. Sorry, you have to breathe and feel your way out. You don’t have to believe me just quite yet, it will be made quite plain for everyone to see over the coming years.

The vision will make itself plain for all to see. Understand that the process is not just “Anti-War”, it is the right the make war on our inner darkness and destroy it utterly so that we can give birth to a new consciousness. This is something much greater than any one of us, yet each one of us is the key to unlocking that gate because it is our individual choices to breath or not the breath and realize what it is that determines the course of events in this time of, dare I say it, tribulation. It doesn’t have to be what all the preachers have been saying, but make no mistake, the process is unavoidable and you are the key. You are the One. Choose to know your self so you can free your self from the illusion. No, this isn’t Buddhism, and the illusion is not the one you are probably thinking of (Maya). The Matrix does have you.

Good luck with all that thinking stuff though. You will at best succeed in tormenting yourselves when it fails. Maybe then you will listen to your intuition. That is what it took for me. There really is spiritual process going on here. But you will have to see that for yourselves I imagine before you can really understand your doubt and disappointment are what is driving you. Peace and justice go together by the way. Just a reminder in case anyone forgot. United for peace and justice is indeed the whole thing.

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Strategy Begins With Know Your Self
Posted by: Just Chris on Apr 3, 2006 4:20 AM   
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I agree with using complex strategy and analysis to undermine the system, but I also believe that that complex strategy must give over first to people' knowing them selves on an inner level. That saves you a lot of grief, trust me on that. If not, you can still go about it the hard way. I'm not the Pope to tell you what you can and cannot do. Go find out for yourselves. You will save your self a lot of trouble by facing your inner fears early on though.

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Full Spectrum Antiwar
Posted by: dougfuda on Apr 3, 2006 5:21 AM   
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Scott is right when he says the following:

"The anti-war movement, first and foremost, needs to develop a laser-like focus on being nothing more or less than anti-war."

There already exists an organization dedicated to this proposition -- it's called the Antiwar League.

We call what we are doing Full Spectrum Antiwar.

I invite Scott and others on the Alternet forum to join. We absolutely could use his expertise and we are currently trying to develop new, more effective strategies and tactics for creating a mainstream antiwar movement that actually has the capability to defeat the enemies of peace.

For examples of what we are doing and saying please visit our website and also see my article which fortuitously is listed today right next to Scott's in the antiwar.com "viewpoints" section.

"Local vs. Federal -- the Antiwar Home Field Advantage"

Doug Fuda
Boston
dougfuda@aol.com

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Military experience good, but not be-all
Posted by: charliej on Apr 3, 2006 8:02 AM   
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While I applaud most of Ritter's points, and studying classical strategy and tactics (both military and otherwise) is essential. He makes the same fallacy that many who support military rebuilding of Iraq make...that somehow those in the military have a superior understanding and education in such circumstances. Just as the military is ill-equipped to run schools, hospitals, and economic development, so those whose expertise in military are not the best spokespersons for nonviolence and peace.

Having stated this, I have many former military friends who are excellent peaceworkers and contribute some of the best hands-on work when it comes to logistics, etc. Keep joining and contributing to the peace movement, but I'll still rather have a little less efficiency and a bot more authenticity in the heart of those who would lead peace.

Charlie Jackson
Texans for Peace

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Scott is Right
Posted by: retrogrouch on Apr 3, 2006 8:05 AM   
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While knowing oneself, acknowledging the interrelationships between issues, saving the whales, etc. is all well and good, Mr. Ritter is exactly right in that in order for protests to be most effective, they must be focused--and ours are not.

The civil rights protests of the 1960s in the U.S. South were focused, and the images they gave to the media were powerful in no small part because African-Amer