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Powell, Baker, Hamilton -- Thanks for Nothing

By Norman Solomon, AlterNet. Posted December 18, 2006.


The problem with the U.S. war effort is not strategy and management, as the ISG will have us believe, but lies and slaughter.
Normon Solomon

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Also by Norman Solomon

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Let's Party Like It’s 1932
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When even public radio parrots the military's official line on the war in Iraq, what hope is there for unbiased, quality reporting?
Mar 27, 2008

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When Colin Powell endorsed the Iraq Study Group report during his Dec. 17 appearance on "Face the Nation," it was another curtain call for a tragic farce.

Four years ago, "moderates" like Powell were making the invasion of Iraq possible. Now, in the guise of speaking truth to power, Powell and ISG co-chairs James Baker and Lee Hamilton are refueling the U.S. war effort by depicting it as a problem of strategy and management.

But the U.S. war effort is a problem of lies and slaughter.

The Baker-Hamilton report stakes out a position for managerial changes that dodge the fundamental immorality of the war effort. And President Bush shows every sign of rejecting the report's call for scaling down that effort.

Meanwhile, most people in the United States favor military disengagement. According to a new Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll, "Seven in 10 say they want the new Congress to pressure the White House to begin bringing troops home within six months."

The nationwide survey came after the Baker-Hamilton report arrived with great -- and delusional -- expectations. In big bold red letters, the cover of Time predicted that the report would take the White House by storm: "The Iraq Study Group says it's time for an exit strategy. Why Bush will listen."

While often depicted as a rebuff to the president's Iraq policies, the report was hardly a prescription for abandoning the U.S. military project in Iraq -- as Baker was at pains to repeatedly point out during a whirlwind round of network interviews.

Hours after the report's release on Dec. 6, Baker told PBS "NewsHour" host Jim Lehrer that the blue-ribbon commission was calling for a long-term U.S. military presence: "So our commitment -- when we say not open-ended, that doesn't mean it's not going to be substantial. And our report makes clear that we're going to have substantial, very robust, residual troop levels in Iraq for a long, long time."

Baker used very similar phrasing the next morning in an interview on ABC's "Good Morning America" -- saying that the report "makes clear we're going to have a really robust American troop presence in Iraq and in the region for a long, long time."

That was 24 hours into the report's release, when media spin by Baker and Hamilton and their allies was boosting a document that asserted a continual American prerogative to devote massive resources to war in Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East. And, in a little-noted precept of the report, it said: "The United States should assist Iraqi leaders to reorganize the national oil industry as a commercial enterprise."

In short, the Baker-Hamilton report was a fallback position for U.S. military intervention -- and for using Pentagon firepower on behalf of U.S.-based oil companies. But the report's call for tactical adjustments provoked fury among the most militaristic politicians and pundits. Their sustained media counterattack took hold in short order.

President Bush wriggled away from the panel's key recommendations -- gradual withdrawal of many U.S. troops from Iraq and willingness to hold diplomatic talks with Syria and Iran. War enthusiasts like Sen. John McCain denounced the report as a recipe for retreat and defeat. The New York Post dubbed Baker and Hamilton "surrender monkeys." Rush Limbaugh called their report "stupid."

By the time its one-week anniversary came around, the Baker-Hamilton report looked about ready for an ashcan of history. Bush had already postponed his announcement of a "new strategy for Iraq" until after the start of the new year -- a delay aimed at cushioning the president from pressure to adopt the report's central recommendations. Even the limited punch of the report has been largely stymied by the most rabidly pro-war forces of American media and politics.

But those forces don't really need to worry about the likes of Colin Powell, James Baker and Lee Hamilton -- as long as the argument is over how the U.S. government should try to get its way in Iraq.

"We are losing -- we haven't lost -- and this is the time, now, to start to put in place the kinds of strategies that will turn this situation around," Powell told CBS viewers on Sunday. That sort of talk stimulates endless rationales for continuing U.S. warfare and facilitates the ongoing escalation of the murderous U.S. air war in Iraq.

Powell's mendacious performance at the U.N. Security Council, several weeks before the invasion of Iraq, is notorious. But an obscure media appearance by Powell, when he was interviewed by the French network TV2 in mid-September 2003, sheds more light on underlying attitudes that unite the venture-capitalist worldviews of "moderates" like Colin Powell and "hardliners" like Dick Cheney.

Trying to justify Washington's refusal to end the occupation, Powell explained: "Since the United States and its coalition partners have invested a great deal of political capital, as well as financial resources, as well as the lives of our young men and women -- and we have a large force there now -- we can't be expected to suddenly just step aside."

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Norman Solomon is the author of the new book, "War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death."

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holman
Posted by: ps2987 on Dec 18, 2006 12:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Colin Powell is one of those "smiley" kind of guys. From The Sand Pebbles.

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Options after the deconstruction of Iraq by Rodrigue Tremblay, Online Journal
Posted by: rwa on Dec 18, 2006 1:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wars of aggression are the most barbarous of all human endeavors and are, more often than not, the instruments of insane tyrants who hear voices. Wars are also waged by warlike gambling leaders who bet their citizens' houses to fulfill their megalomaniac dreams of grandeur.

And the illegal military invasion of Iraq was a gigantic gamble from the start. What's more, it is a war that was planned and executed on the basis of fabricated lies. It was a war based on false pretenses and on false perceptions of the Muslim Middle East. For example, it is not true that Middle Eastern Muslims hate the West "because they hate our way of life, our freedom, and our democracy." Polls indicate that such ideas are simply based on ignorant prejudices. This wicked war will be judged by history as one of the most blatant abuses of power by any American administration ever.

In the process, the Bush-Cheney team, through a combination of design and blunder, has inflamed the entire Middle East, from Iraq and Afghanistan, to Palestine and Lebanon, and, soon, to Iran, and possibly Syria, Saudi Arabia and even Turkey. In Iraq, nearly four years after the March 20, 2003, invasion of the country, the mess and the destruction are complete, leaving behind a genuine humanitarian catastrophe and a political near-debacle.

Former United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan, for one, has concluded that the "average Iraqi’s life" is worse now than it was under Saddam Hussein and that the situation in Iraq is now "much worse" than a civil war. Even some Republican senators now say openly that Bush's war in Iraq may be 'criminal'. Only President George W. Bush and his Rasputin-like vice president, it seems, continue to think that their wrecking-crew Middle East policy makes any sense. Even departing Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld rejects bluntly their stubborn "stay-the-course" and "must-complete-the-mission" policy.

However, departing Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld amazingly listed 20 tactical options for U.S. policy in Iraq, but no strategic option. It seems that among G. W. Bush's sorcerer's apprentices there are a few tacticians, but no strategist...

When George W. Bush invaded Iraq in March 2003, he did not only topple the Saddam Hussein regime, one of George W. Bush's juvenile fantasies, but he made sure that the entire infrastructure of the country was also destroyed: the army was dismembered, security services were abolished, and, the ruling Sunni-dominated Baath Party was dissolved and its members purged from any administrative positions. An enormous political vacuum resulted, opening the gates to a bloody civil war between the Sunnis in the center, the Shiites in the south and the Kurds in the north.

In this sense, the debacle in Iraq was a planned failure. The final chapter of this drama would be the official break-up of the country into pieces along religious and/or ethnic lines, to the great satisfaction of two countries, i.e. Iran and Israel, the only two countries bound to profit directly from the fragmentation of Iraq.

This is probably what we are going to witness in the coming months. But, just as President Richard Nixon promised to get Americans out of Vietnam in 1968, and only succeeded in doing so in 1973, after 20,000 more young Americans and hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese died there, President George W. Bush will try to temporize and save face, as thousands more Americans and Iraqis die. It is a terrible shame.

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Shame On You
Posted by: braxxian on Dec 18, 2006 4:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
George W. Bush and his little band of lunatics are the greatest war criminals the US has ever known. Shame on the American culture and people for allowing these criminals to endure for so long.

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Lies and yet again Lies
Posted by: sweetmorganlefey on Dec 19, 2006 5:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From the begining of his presidency, Bush & Co. has lied to the American people over and over again. I read in the media about their lies being uncovered but I do NOT see a move to confront them on their lying. This adminstration has a purpose, and it's purpose is to align itself with Corporate America and the huge profits being made through this war. Over and over again Bush et al has proven by their deeds that most of the American people are a disposible commody to be decieved and abused. The war is here, and the terroist is sitting in the White House.

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» War Profiteering Posted by: Tom Holum
The Iraq Study Group,
Posted by: Basenjis on Dec 19, 2006 8:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the supposedly "wise elders" of our society, in spite of the whoopla and money spent on this "study" showed not a shred more wisdom than the same number of ordinary citizens picked right off the streets of America, and possibly a lot less. Harry Reid's decision to ignore the results of the November election and to continue to throw good money after bad and good lives after wasted lives, makes him no wiser than the other manipulators. I don't know a single person who voted Democrat in the recent election who feels anything but disgust that the "strategy" is to continue on indefinitely. What does it take to get our message across.........Stop this war! We want out!

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» RE: The Iraq Study Group, Posted by: badkitty
» RE: The Iraq Study Group, Posted by: Prophit
frank67
Posted by: frank67 on Dec 19, 2006 9:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've said it before and I'll say it again: GW Bush makes Warren Harding look like a great statesmen! And the "bi-partisan panel" is just a bunch of halfwits: OIL OIL OIL is the message! As for Powell - he of Mi Lai cover-up fame when he was on Westmoreland's staff - is just an opportunist to the nth degree. As my old history professor used to say: "The more things change, the more they stay the same." Or, FOLLOW THE MONEY!!!!!
Peace, my fellow Amercians.

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Thanks for nothing
Posted by: willymack on Dec 19, 2006 10:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So, what did you expect-a confession of the bushie sins and a call for immediate withdrawal? Not a chance. Not while there are "war " profits to be made, and Iraq's oil is in American and British hands. This was nothing more or less than an attempt by Poppy's boys to exert some control over the increasingly unhinged dumbya and possibly even grease the skids for an attack on Iran.

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Invasion of Iraq was a planned policy long before 9-11 with an ....
Posted by: Prophit on Dec 19, 2006 10:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
.... enormous agenda that they have no intention of abandoning for anyone. Until we put our foot down and the soldiers, like Lt Watade refuse to serve, we will continue on this course without regard to what the American people want.

I am sorry but they couldn't give a shit less about what we want and never have. This is a huge agenda for a lot of players and they will not capitulate easy. They will fight this til their last dying breath.

I was shocked to see Baker made head of this panel/group and when I saw the "privatization" recommendations of the oil industry, I almost fell out of my chair laughing. Bakers law firm has worked for the oil companies for 10 years now trying to entice saddam and Iraq to privatize their oil industry and they refused to do so. 10 whole years of Bakers life in failure for just one act he needed to justify his pay from the oil companies.

Well, he got to control the agenda through this commission and unlike Cheney and Bush, his brain works properly and he is a brilliant man.

They played this perfectly making it "sound" like they want out of Iraq but they don't. They want that oil and they are going to get it by golly by hook or by crook. THE MSM hasn't said a word about this connection. I had to find it from either overseas press or the alternative press both of which carried the story.

What is truly becoming untenable is the lack of "truth" in anything from anyone in power. Its getting old and interferes with our ability to retain any kind of trust in the institutions we have come to depend on. I frankly, am getting sick and tired of this. They will have what they want and they will try every strategy UNTIL THEY GET IT, PERIOD, END OF STORY, KISS MY BUTT, ETC ETC ETC.

We have seen them do this before and they always win by shear determination and tenacity, the old 'never give up, never give in', and by golly it always works and it will work this time with the aiding and abetting of the dems. I just wish everyone would wake up. I wish the soldiers would say "no more" we are out of here. CAN HAVE A WAR IF NO ONE SHOWS UP, CAN YA????

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Immoral war of empire --- oil and 'old economy' finance
Posted by: amacd on Dec 19, 2006 12:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Solomon correctly notes that the Iraq war is at heart an immoral and illegal war based on oil investments that, as Powell said, "we (the ruling-elite) can't be expected to suddenly just step aside."

He also notes, "The Baker-Hamilton report stakes out a position for managerial changes that dodge the fundamental immorality of the war".

What is being dodged here are the fundamental facts and truth of this war --- which like an elephant in the living room is not being talked about. But if we address the fundamental truth of the Iraq war it may just allow the American people to find a real victory:

Yes, Iraq is certainly a neocon conspired war --- and yes, it is an oil-war.

But more than anything Iraq is a 'war of empire' --- and like all wars of empire, it is an elitist war, an arrogant war, a non-democratic war, a lying and deceitful war, and a war which sticks its finger in the eyes of the average 'working class' population and says, "you don't matter squat, and we elite will ignore you with impunity, slaughter your sons, laugh at your pain and tragedy, and then spit on you with contempt because you don't have the cojones or brains to simply walk away from us and govern yourselves."

Wars of blatant, arrogant, elitist empire are always painful and degrading for the population of the empire waging the war, but they don't always end without victory for anyone.

I genuinely believe that this 'war of empire' in Iraq might well lead to a victory for the American people.

My hope that this 'war of empire' waged by an imperial elite, arrogant and removed from the American people, can possibly lead to a victory is based on what happened in the Afghanistan war ---- No, not the Bush empire's war in Afghanistan, but the Soviet empire's war in Afghanistan!

You see, the arrogant, detached, unaccountable, smug elite of the Soviet empire that watched impassively while tens of thousands of Russian mother's sons were slaughtered and 'bled' in the Soviet imperial forces for the whole decade of the 1980's in a senseless 'war of empire' in Afghanistan was actually more the cause of internal collapse of the Soviet empire than anything that that second-rate actor playing US president ever did to bring about the end of the 'evil empire'.

Once average people, even people in a country like Russia, that is not nominally thought of as a democracy, reach a certain point where they realize in their very souls that the ruling-elite constitute a vainglorious empire, not only beyond the reach of the people, but actually taking pleasure in inflicting pain on the people (and their children) for no reason other than that they contemptuously can, then the people understand that they have nothing left to lose --- and they turn on the empire, and simply refuse to go along.

I fully believe that this November's vote was a vote of the average people of America not only against the specific war in Iraq, but even more so, a resounding vote against all wars of empire --- and even against the very concept of arrogant elite empire in general.

I fully believe that the average American people are giving their government a last chance to represent them and act on their wishes, rather than to continue to act as a detached, arrogant, elitist empire waging senseless war against their wishes. Both faux parties of this imperial elitist government have been put on notice by an enraged public of citizens who formerly thought that they lived in a representative democracy.

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The Big Liberal Lie
Posted by: cheneybush2008 on Dec 19, 2006 1:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Big Liberal Lie? You know it.

"Our shrill, myopic, self-loathing protests, intelligence leaks, and general anarchy helped to end the Vietnam War."

They did not end the war. They PROLONGED the war, emboldened the murdering communist thugs and VC, and made it possible for them to continue the slaughter after the U.S. left in 1975. And the same thugs run Vietnam today, sorry Jane-niks.

Sadly, LBJ gave a rat's ass what the flaming left thought about warfare - after deciding to never cross the DMZ even once in force, effectively denying American forces victory and ultimately modern freedoms for Vietnam.

The north of Vietnam was and remains a far more rural (bird flu, anyone?), and undereducated, place than the Western leaning South - which simply wanted a chance to have free trade, free religion, and free communications without 1 party red rule and coercion.

BTW: The U.S. armed forces pre-treaty never lost a major battle in Vietnam. Zero. Zip. Nada. Not Tet. Not An Loc. Not the highlands. The loss of the war was the combined work of failed diplomats, creeping politicians (in both parties), illegal FBI leaks, tenured domestic academics (some of whom lied further, claiming to have been combat vets when the military got popular again in the fickle press), and unlimited major meddling media.

The lesson of Vietnam? Same lesson as Gulf I, and Iraq today:

WIN THE G-D WAR.

[Opinion. Your broken down hybrid flying camel mileage back to CITGO may vary.]

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» RE: The Big Liberal Lie Posted by: spanky
"Can't Step Aside"
Posted by: hotlipsin61 on Dec 19, 2006 2:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Colin Powell's last words from that interview are profound at best-"can't step aside"-in Iraq. So we'll (the USA) will stand in the middle of the highway waiting for the 18-wheeler to come barreling down on us and we'll be crushed under its force. Smart move, Powell.
We'll be in Iraq long after Bush has left office. And the great slaughter will continue. Merry Christmas, everybody.

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TERROR @ the MACHINE
Posted by: Hal on Dec 19, 2006 3:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
N. Solomon at the limited hangout “left” often reminds us that Iraq War Inc. and its greater “war on terror” is based on lies.

Of course, what he fails to mention is the 911 elephant in the room and decades of preparation that counterfeit “war on terror” took to mount and palm off (from before a unanimously passed 1998 “Iraq Liberation Act” ad nauseam). This is a train wreck of serial crime and deception that was officially kicked off by false-flag 911. Thus, new lies for old haven’t stopped yet. All courtesy of a crime puppet DC and whore MSM that will tell the country anything but the truth both were originally meant to uphold.

With Baker (of the Hamilton-Baker “Iraq Study Group”) eyebrow deep in the oligarch corporate crime rule that foisted 911 cover-up via its House of Saud satellite – the absurd ISG findings are hardly a surprise. After all, it was a “deeper understanding” of BushCo’s J. Baker (Baker-Botts) that defended the House of Saud against the 911 Families.

If it were not for Big Oil and its depraved cartel banking string-pullers none of this would be happening at the Mid East thru Eurasia. None of it.

There is nothing more obscene or needless than war. And nothing that causes more terror to the victims of those who engage in it for the oligarch profits bled out.

ONE MORE TIME:

Significant wars are fought over public blood money for private power. They always have been and always will be.

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Privatization is a side issue that they pursue relentlessly on a global basis.
Posted by: rwa on Dec 20, 2006 7:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The 6 unique objectives of the Iraq War Crime:

1) Permanent destruction of the military capacity of Israel's most powerful enemy (prior to the invasion Iraq was in a state of declared war with Israel).

2) A half Trillion per Year Defense Cash Cow. Can you spell extortion and fraud.

3) An Israeli Northern Iraq to give the Russian Mafia - hiding behing Jews in Israel - access to the EU energy market.

4) A strategic geography to run CIA, MI6 and Mossad assasination and sabotage operations from.

5) Water to Israel (and possibly Saudi Arabia) by canal.

6) Risk inflated enegry prices. Evidence: a) Cheney's Energy Task Force b) meetings between US DOE,DOS, UNOCAL and Taliban in August 2001 c) margins at 3 times fair value and no corporate taxes. Note - we have never had an energy drought - we have been in a glut since the 80's - even during Katrina (Can you spell RICO violation or Market Manipulation?)

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Those who will not take the field
Posted by: Ian MacLeod on Dec 21, 2006 12:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Those who will not take the field,
and will not fight are forced to yield.
Leave the Wrong unmet, unfought,
and give up all that you have got.

Those who fight and will not yield,
who leave behind a bloody field,
may leave their bone and blood thereon,
but theirs who follow fear no Wrong.

Evil is a coward, friends
and fears what might well mean it’s end.
Learn well that Evil’s simply known:
It promises what’s never done.

All cost is borne but by the ones
who have the least – those send their sons
and daughters into needless Hell,
while safe, the wealthy still do well.

It will not fight in honest light,
nor from the front with it’s own might.
Best with others’ children tricked,
and say that all were fairly picked.

If still you are uncertain now,
then find the money, follow how
it made it’s way to those who called
for war, but never fight, or fall.

Fight not for words that stir the blood,
or wealth or “glory” – war has none.
Raise weapons but in Freedom’s name,
But know the truth or own the blame.

For those who will not take the field,
and will not fight are forced to yield.
Leave the Wrong unmet, unfought,
you give up all that you have got.



Ian MacLeod
December 21st, 2006
Oregon Veteran

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