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Chomsky on Why Bush Does Diplomacy Mafia-Style

By Michael Shank, Foreign Policy in Focus. Posted February 26, 2007.


Noam Chomsky explains what he thinks the U.S. will do to Iran, what is really at stake for America in Iraq, and why Palestinians are more likely to uphold their peace agreements than Israelis.

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Michael Shank recently interviewed Noam Chomsky, noted linguist and foreign policy expert, on the latest developments in U.S. policy toward Iran, Iraq, North Korea, and Venezuela. Along the way, Chomsky also commented on climate change, the World Social Forum, and why international relations are run like the mafia.

Michael Shank: With similar nuclear developments in North Korea and Iran, why has the United States pursued direct diplomacy with North Korea but refuses to do so with Iran?

Noam Chomsky: To say that the United States has pursued diplomacy with North Korea is a little bit misleading. It did under the Clinton administration, though neither side completely lived up to their obligations. Clinton didn't do what was promised, nor did North Korea, but they were making progress. So when Bush came into the presidency, North Korea had enough uranium or plutonium for maybe one or two bombs, but then very limited missile capacity. During the Bush years it's exploded. The reason is, he immediately canceled the diplomacy and he's pretty much blocked it ever since.

They made a very substantial agreement in September 2005 in which North Korea agreed to eliminate its enrichment programs and nuclear development completely. In return the United States agreed to terminate the threats of attack and to begin moving towards the planning for the provision of a light water reactor, which had been promised under the framework agreement. But the Bush administration instantly undermined it. Right away, they canceled the international consortium that was planning for the light water reactor, which was a way of saying we're not going to agree to this agreement. A couple of days later they started attacking the financial transactions of various banks. It was timed in such a way to make it clear that the United States was not going to move towards its commitment to improve relations. And of course it never withdrew the threats. So that was the end of the September 2005 agreement.

That one is now coming back, just in the last few days. The way it's portrayed in the U.S. media is, as usual with the government's party line, that North Korea is now perhaps a little more amenable to accept the September 2005 proposal. So there's some optimism. If you go across the Atlantic, to the Financial Times, to review the same events they point out that an embattled Bush administration, it's their phrase, needs some kind of victory, so maybe it'll be willing to move towards diplomacy. It's a little more accurate I think if you look at the background.

But there is some minimal sense of optimism about it. If you look back over the record -- and North Korea is a horrible place nobody is arguing about that -- on this issue they've been pretty rational. It's been a kind of tit-for-tat history. If the United States is accommodating, the North Koreans become accommodating. If the United States is hostile, they become hostile. That's reviewed pretty well by Leon Sigal, who's one of the leading specialists on this, in a recent issue of Current History. But that's been the general picture and we're now at a place where there could be a settlement on North Korea.

That's much less significant for the United States than Iran. The Iranian issue I don't think has much to do with nuclear weapons frankly. Nobody is saying Iran should have nuclear weapons -- nor should anybody else. But the point in the Middle East, as distinct from North Korea, is that this is center of the world's energy resources. Originally the British and secondarily the French had dominated it, but after the Second World War, it's been a U.S. preserve. That's been an axiom of U.S. foreign policy, that it must control Middle East energy resources. It is not a matter of access as people often say. Once the oil is on the seas it goes anywhere. In fact if the United States used no Middle East oil, it'd have the same policies. If we went on solar energy tomorrow, it'd keep the same policies. Just look at the internal record, or the logic of it, the issue has always been control. Control is the source of strategic power.

Dick Cheney declared in Kazakhstan or somewhere that control over pipeline is a "tool of intimidation and blackmail." When we have control over the pipelines it's a tool of benevolence. If other countries have control over the sources of energy and the distribution of energy then it is a tool of intimidation and blackmail exactly as Cheney said. And that's been understood as far back as George Kennan and the early post-war days when he pointed out that if the United States controls Middle East resources it'll have veto power over its industrial rivals. He was speaking particularly of Japan but the point generalizes.

So Iran is a different situation. It's part of the major energy system of the world.

Shank: So when the United States considers a potential invasion you think it's under the premise of gaining control? That is what the United States will gain from attacking Iran?

Chomsky: There are several issues in the case of Iran. One is simply that it is independent and independence is not tolerated. Sometimes it's called successful defiance in the internal record. Take Cuba. A very large majority of the U.S. population is in favor of establishing diplomatic relations with Cuba and has been for a long time with some fluctuations. And even part of the business world is in favor of it too. But the government won't allow it. It's attributed to the Florida vote but I don't think that's much of an explanation. I think it has to do with a feature of world affairs that is insufficiently appreciated. International affairs is very much run like the mafia. The godfather does not accept disobedience, even from a small storekeeper who doesn't pay his protection money. You have to have obedience otherwise the idea can spread that you don't have to listen to the orders and it can spread to important places.


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Foreign Policy In Focus contributor Michael Shank is the policy director for the 3D Security Initiative.

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As usual...
Posted by: johnecolby on Feb 26, 2007 12:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Chomsky is on track except he offers no solutions, only disempowerment for the unprivilaged. We don't have to accept the status quo. First awareness, then imagination resulting in action. We are *not* powerless.

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» RE: As usual... Posted by:
» wtf? Posted by: ethanay
» RE: As usual... Posted by: Quasar
Best analysis of the situation yet
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Feb 26, 2007 12:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There's at least one quote that's worth repeating: "Once the oil is on the seas it goes anywhere. In fact if the United States used no Middle East oil, it'd have the same policies. If we went on solar energy tomorrow, it'd keep the same policies. Just look at the internal record, or the logic of it, the issue has always been control. Control is the source of strategic power."

That's the central issue behind the Iraq occupation that no US corporate media outlet will touch. The NYT spin is that the oil issue is all about sharing revenues between Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds - they won't discuss the desire of Bush&Co. to control global oil supplies via any means whatsoever; they won't discuss the State Department's mafia threats: "Don't buy Iranian gas".

The Mafia analogy is right on the money - which is why mob movies are so popular in the US - people understand that the mob is how things are really run, as compared to the Disney version of reality.

George Schultz, Hoover mentor to Condi Rice, director of Bechtel and a Gilead (Tamiflu-Rumsfeld) director, explicity stated this many times using his "Gardening analogy": "But gardening is something you have to do if you're going to be effective in foreign affairs . . . come around reasonably frequently and get rid of the weeds before they get too big." - i.e. there are always those who defy the will of the Dons, and they must be made examples of.

Mafia movies generally revolve around 'blue-collar' organized crime, but recently there have been many movies that tie into the 'white-collar' organized crime families, of which the Bush and Cheney families are good examples - for example, Inside Man, Heat, the Manchurian Candidate, Lord of War, Blood Diamond, the Constant Gardener, Syriana and The Good Shepherd all touch on the white-collar mafia.

There was a time in the US and Italy when noone would talk about the mafia - it didn't exist, it wasn't real, it couldn't be openly spoken of. Eventually it all came out. A similar dynamic now exists with respect to the organized white-collar crime that hides behind hedge funds and private equity funds; the Enron variety, the Halliburton variety, the Carlyle variety all being examples. This version of the mafia isn't run by Italian immigrants, or Cuban immigrants, or by hoods from the street, but by the Ivy League whitebread clans of the corporatocracy - and their lieutenants work at the Pentagon, their consiglieris work at Justice and State, and the Dons never get their hands dirty.

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» Israel lobby = Modern Media/Corporate Mafia Posted by: Aufklaerung_Baboon
» Spot on Yet Again Posted by: sapamm
» RE: Spot on Yet Again Posted by: xgroverx
» Chomsky on Cheney's profit-logic Posted by: eddie torres
» RE: Chomsky on Cheney's profit-logic Posted by: thoughtcriminal
blame the media blame the media blame the media...
Posted by: Rungle on Feb 26, 2007 4:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
jesus christ, yet again we see it: wake up, people! the media congloms are keeping you dumb! and we are letting them! even non-amerikans such as my own humble self get sucked into enough exported shit to not come out smelling like roses. the poet (Z de la R) was smack on the money when he spoke of those who give the thieves the key to their homes: we're handing over the keys to our brains! i know i've posted this same crap before, but for the sake of all things holy, is there nothing we can do to stop the rot?
Read books. Listen to the radio. Talk to people, especially if they don't look like you, and definitely if they don't think you. Stop giving in to lies. Challenge lies.
Or give up entirely.

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Here We Go Again
Posted by: Frenchman on Feb 26, 2007 5:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now it is Iran’s turn as the US propaganda machine starts to crank out it’s false message. The overall pattern at work here is exactly the same one utilized for Iraq: phony diplomacy, then U.N. action which will similarly make compliance by Iran impossible, then a few speeches accusing Iran of defying the will of the "civilized world" and of being too great a threat to be tolerated -- and then the bombing. And almost no one will be heard to say that the "crisis" was created out of thin air, and that in fact no crisis exists at all. And like Iraq all of it will be based on lies from beginning to end.

Let us state the final conclusion boldly and unmistakably, so we may appreciate its full horror: the Bush administration has already decided, and probably decided some time ago, that it will attack Iran. They want a wider war. Everything that is now going on is simply the cover for the moment when the bombing begins, intended to provide what the American public and the world will accept as “justification” for the attack.

The Bush administration is making public statements that the US intelligence agencies regard as an increasing body of evidence pointing to an Iranian link, including information gleaned from Iranians and Iraqis captured in recent American raids on an Iranian diplomatic office in Erbil and another sites in Baghdad. (Confessions no doubt gained by contravening the Geneva Convention against torture. It does not baud well for the rest of the civilized world when we see how far this nation who used to be the Free World’s leading beckon of light for freedom & human decency has under Bush's leadership fallen to the level of a Banana Republic.)

Most intelligent people find it unbelievable that Bush believes the rest of the world is so unknowledgeable about the Middle East and as such can be duped by crude and inaccurate propaganda.

First lets put some facts in context regarding Iraq and Iran:

Iraq is made up of three distinct peoples:
1. Shiite: (Who are the Iraqi majority and who now lead the Iraq government.)

2. Kurds: (Who are a minority in Iraq and the Kurdish people are not popular in Turkey or Iran because of their own local Kurds desire for some sort of local autonomy like they now have in Iraq.)

3. Sunnis: (Who are a minority in Iraq and who had supported Saddam Hussein and his brutal suppression of all Iraqi people.) The now disenfranchised Sunni minority constitutes the main body of the Iraq insurgency.

Iran is mainly made up of Shiites who had traditionally supported the anti Saddam Shiite suppressed majority.

So right away we see a flaw in the US Administrations assertion that Iran is arming and supporting the Iraqi insurgency when it’s Iran’s historic enemy the Sunni’s who are the insurgents. These insurgents want to bring down the Shiite lead government that was created by and is supported by the US.

For all the care taken by the US to bolster its case - the weeks of delay in presenting it, the minute detail, the show of weapons parts - the presentation at the weekend was disturbingly reminiscent of the claims about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction that turned out not to exist.

There was a similar lack of proof that the Iranian authorities were the direct suppliers and a similarly worrying insistence on anonymity for the briefers. If the "evidence" turns out to have been misleading, there will be no one identifiable to blame.

On Sunday, unidentifiable US officials presented what they said was proof that Iran was directly involved in supplying weapons to Shia militias in Iraq. Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates appeared to allude to this intelligence when he told reporters in Seville, Spain, that weapon fragments found in Iraq point to Iran as a source.

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Here We Go Again (Continued)
Posted by: Frenchman on Feb 26, 2007 5:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
US officials have gone a step further. They produced parts of explosive devices with serial numbers and other markings on they said originated in Iran, and they linked them to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, and then to the top Iranian leadership. They also implicated the five diplomatic Iranians recently arrested in Arbil.

Look, I admit, I don't know much about bomb making. And I don't know much about how factories label bombs. But I do know that in Iran virtually all numbers were in the Farsi-Arabic script. They were not and do not resemble our numbers. Now, I may be wrong, but I have a feeling that the implication that this round captured in the photo is bogus. Color me very skeptical. Any thoughts?

To further emphasize that this is a trumped up propaganda ploy we saw how Tony Snow danced and couldn't give a straight answer today at the White House press conference regarding Gen. Pace not following the company line. Where Gen. Pace publicly disagrees with the White House on Iranian weapons… Marine Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said yesterday that he has no information indicating Iran's government is directing the supply of lethal weapons to Shiite insurgent groups in Iraq.

Even if the devices seem to be Iranian in design and manufacture, there are other plausible explanations, not least the close association between the Iranian and Iraqi Shias at grassroots level and the fact that many Shia militants were formerly exiled in Iran.

It is also pertinent to ask why the US is pointing the finger at Iran and Iraq's Shias, when the insurgents doing most damage to US troops and the US-backed Iraqi government are not Shia, but the Sunnis who lost power with Saddam Hussein.

Is the US administration using Iran as a scapegoat for its own failings in Iraq? Is it softening up international opinion for another show of military force?

Given the complaisance with which almost every part of the US establishment accepted the official line on Saddam's non-existent weapons, it is gratifying to observe that this time around senior Democrats in Congress have declined to take the administration at its word. They are treating the case against Iran with due skepticism, warning that resort to a military solution would be a grave mistake.

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» RE: Here We Go Again (Continued) Posted by: MyLeftFoot
A Government that Wants Wars
Posted by: jhbeck23 on Feb 26, 2007 6:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's a long, long story, and we're now in the middle of it.
War is good economically and career-wise for certain people.
War creates immense profits for some otherwise useless businesses.
War gets democratic nations to do what the citizens generally know better than to do.

We have a war party in government, just like Japan had in the days of Tojo. Just like the bullying blustering Mussolini in his uniforms and boots. That's the simple ugly picture.

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Therefore...
Posted by: Steve Adair on Feb 26, 2007 6:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Every time I read something like this interview, I think there ought to be a follow up article: 'Therefore, does any of it really matter?'

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» RE: Therefore... Posted by: Krain61
» RE: Therefore... Posted by: Frenchman
One critical point missing
Posted by: JohnnyM on Feb 26, 2007 7:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Otherwise, Chomsky is right on the money.

When you run a mob-like organization you need somewhere to clean the dirty money. You know, like the trillion missing from the pentagon, etc.

And that's what the world bank is - the cleaner. The fact that Iran, Venezuela, North Korea and Iraq were not part of the world bank is exactly why they are labeled the axis of evil. It's defiance of the US, yes, but more annoying to these people is the defiance of the bank and hence lack of economic control (i.e. power) . We here in Canada have already lost the "war" to the US, as has Mexico, and so owning the world bank billions is exactly what they want...Chavez paid his debt off, that is why they hate him.

Follow the money and you will find the real evil in the world. The Europeans, the Americans and the Israelis...the bankers!

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» Spot on Posted by: rwa
» RE: One critical point missing Posted by: MyLeftFoot
» RE: One critical point missing Posted by: ConnecttheDots
xymphora
Posted by: rwa on Feb 26, 2007 7:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Chomsky presents this Shi’ite alliance as the ultimate nightmare for the American Establishment, but it is in fact the final stage of Wurmser’s Zionist Plan for the Middle East. After decades of supporting Saddam’s Sunni government as the sole bulwark against Shi’ite dominance of Middle East oil, why the hell would the American Establishment suddenly decide to remove Saddam and let the Shi’ites control everything? On the other hand, this is the ultimate Zionist goal, to remove the 'oil weapon’ from the Sunnis and put it in the hands of moderate Shi’ites. The plan, which continues despite a few temporary Lobby problems in the United States, is to put Saudi, Iranian and Iraqi oil fields in the hands of Shi’ites, who will form a covert alliance with Israel and thus remove the oil weapon from those who might want to curtail Zionist imperialism.

Let me invent a new term: azionist. Azionist analysis is the study of the Middle East without considering the role of Zionism or Israel, and Chomsky is its champion. People are finding it increasingly difficult to argue that the attack on Iraq was about getting Iraqi oil, given that the upshot of the attack was essentially to destroy Iraqi oil production capability (the oil companies knew this would happen, which is why they were against the attack, and draft Iraqi laws don’t prove anything unless: a) there is oil to pump, and b) the draft law is passed, which it won’t be). Similarly, nuking Iran isn’t going to help Iranian oil production (though Chomsky’s latest conspiracy theory is that the plan will be to turn the Iranian oil fields over to local Arabs). The shift from getting oil to controlling oil is supposed to explain everything, including how the Establishment will benefit from the various Zionist schemes, but it remains to be seen how removing much of the world’s oil production is supposed to benefit the people who make their trillions from selling oil and the things made from oil [these businesses have trouble passing through higher oil costs to consumers]. It’s odd that the only spokesmen against attacking Iran are the representatives of the very Establishment which is supposed, on azionist analysis, to be behind everything, including the supposed upcoming attack on Iran.

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» JINSA and Chomsky Posted by: rwa
» What are you talking about? Posted by: fanny666
» Quote from this post Posted by: rwa
» RE: Quote from this post Posted by: buffeliscious
» RE: Quote from this post Posted by: fanny666
» RE: Quote from this post Posted by: fanny666
» RE: xymphora Posted by: Krain61
U.S. citizens must find a way to regain control over our corporations
Posted by: disenfranchised on Feb 26, 2007 7:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This interview makes the point that corporate-driven government has evolved to become the rulers of this nation and most of the world. They control access to medical treatment, the cost to citizens of every necessity such as food and energy, and currently, our government policies, both domestic and foreign.

A. Corporations are artificial entities created by our government.
B. Corporate decision-makers are directly required by law to do everything that is legal to obtain and increase profit This fiduciary responsibility is defined by law and must be expanded to address 'the common good'. No moral constraints apply unless written into law, so abuse of the citizenry is required in a sense. It is our fault.
C. We, the citizenry, have the responsibility to set the rules of business for those corporate decision-makers through our representative constitutional government.

Simply, we must take back control of our government for these artifical entites that have somehow achieved greater power than the human citizens. We must return this world-dominating political power to the humans, the real citizens.

How?

1. Take back control of our representative government, eliminate corporate access to the political process. The way it is now, corporate economic power overwhelms and silences the will of the human citizens.
2. Require our elected representatives to regulate corporations (which exist at our discretion) so as to serve the common good as they should. By regulation, corporate entities can then profit not only shareholders but also the people to whom they market their products and services without abuse. That is our job as citizens.
3. Finally, and possibly most important, we, the voters, must require corporate money not be made available in any form, direct or through any soft-money processes currently in use, to politicians seeking election.

CORPORATIONS ARE NOT PEOPLE, THEY ARE NOT CITIZENS, AND HAVE NO CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO VOTE. THEY ARE NOT ALLOWED BY LAW TO BE CONCERNED ABOUT 'THE COMMON GOOD' BEYOND THE POINT THAT THEIR IMAGE IMPACTS THEIR MARKETING AND PROFITS.

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In defence of Banana Republics
Posted by: goodsensecynic on Feb 26, 2007 7:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Although sympathetic to much of the recent post by "Frenchman," I worry some about the sentence that includes "the Free World’s leading beckon [sic] of light for freedom & human decency has under Bush's leadership fallen to the level of a Banana Republic."

For some of us born and raised outside the great Behemoth, the US record does indeed reveal instances in which liberty and human decency were important elements of its foreign policy and were certainly much on the minds of ordinary Americans. The complete record, however, is more ambiguous.

From the Louisiana Purchase (1803), the attack on Canada (1812), and the war against Mexico combined with the annexation of Texas and California (1845-1850) to the war against Spain (to say nothing of the decades of destruction of Indian nations), the US has displayed an aggressive foreign policy, largely associated with the Monroe Doctrine's claim to hemispheric hegemony.

The late 20th and now the opening of the 21st centuries show little more than that the old dreams of Empire have been expanded and "globalized."

In this process, the United States has not come to resemble a "banana republic," but a sort of high-tech post-republican Rome. Besides, most "banana republics" were direct or indirect creations of America itself. They featured foreign (i.e., US) domination of the local economy (often by United Fruit Co.) and militaristic dictatorships (usually supported by the US government). As such, they were victims of American policy, and not depraved regimes that arose somehow sui generis.

Now that much of America's attention (and military resources) are focused on Middle-Eastern oil reserves, Central and South American countries have a little space in which to exercise the beginnings of autonomy. The dreaded rise of "leftist" governments (all democratically elected) in places like Bolivia, Brazil, Ecuador, Nicaragua and Venezuela has certainly sparked American interest, and precipitated intensified propaganda campaigns that may yet descend to covert or overt military action.

If the same fate that befell Arbenz, Bosch, Allende and others is in store for emerging southern leaders, it will be because the new Romans have decided to smack down democratic "banana republics" seeking only to chart an independent course temporarily outside the reach of the CIA, the WTO and other "beacons" on the hill.

If so, the US will have well and truly extinguished the light of freedom and decency, and the old-fashioned political economy of "banana republics" will have been reimposed on the diverse Bolivarian.

Until and unless that happens, however, American progressives have an important job to do. It is to oppose the aggressive impulses that have long framed US ambitions, and to learn to make common cause with potential friends outside the ambit of international corporate control.

In doing so, they would do well to reflect upon the fact that, whatever his many faults, Mr. Bush did not invent the pattern he is seeking to fulfill. The legacy has been long in the making, and both Democrats and Republicans have much blame to share.

Moreover, genuine progressives should understand that using the language of "banana republics" betokens a kind of imperial mentality and contemptuous sense of moral superiority that are not only "insensitive," but also display a wilful ignorance of history.

The US has done much to promote democracy. It has also done much to thwart it, especially when its perceived economic interests (or those of its far-famed "military-industrial complex" are at stake. When thinking of other parts of the world, it would serve the citizens of the United States on all points on its rather truncated domestic political spectrum to approach other cultures and countries with a modicum of well-earned modesty.

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I just read a similar analysis about this region.... I knew they were...
Posted by: Prophit on Feb 26, 2007 7:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... never going to let the congress stop them. The agenda is too big. I just realized that Israel, who THINKS they are using us, are in fact being "used" by us as Irans WMD to justify the attacks and what will be the result of that??? It keeps perpetual war in the middle east and why?

To keep the region, INCLUDING ISRAEL, from ever having the ability to advance economically, politically etc. The US wants to keep them in the dark ages so they can never protect their resources and by virture of that "1984" economic scenario, we will always control their resources from that embassy Island of civilization and those 14 permanent bases.

This admin, I believe, couldn't care less about Israel, it will be perpetual war if Iran is attacked and guess who will receive he brunt of it.... it appears, AS USUAL, that Israel is clueless about being used once again for someone elses agenda. I am not saying they don't deserve it, but in reality, they do no control this whole thing. They will be used to keep this all going and keep the region in the dark ages and if they are wiped off the face of the earth, this administration and subsequent administrations won't care at all unless we get the neocons out.

This analysis I read explained so much that I didn't understand. Its why these people don't care about what we think, we are irrelevant as is Israel.

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» Ebb and Flow Posted by: rwa
» Skeptical Inquirer: Posted by: rwa
» Credibility? Posted by: rwa
» Two comments on Hersh Posted by: rwa
» Real CIA scoop: Posted by: rwa
» RE: eal CIA scoop: Posted by: fanny666
» CIA scoop: Posted by: rwa
» So write to him Posted by: fanny666
Work
Posted by: ssmit355 on Feb 26, 2007 8:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I know a lot of awake people. But they are burdened by debt, they have mediocre jobs that barely pay the bills, and they have a sense of duty and responsibility (unlike the white-collar-pathocrats).

Until we go hungry and just before the sinister folks in wicked administrations steal our children, most folks will continue to toil.

Many of you who read here are elite warriors of knowledge, and you will serve us all if you can gather local support for your concepts and do work, rather than gathering abstract, internet support and hoping.

We will wake. Stirring your neighbors from their slumber will cause great and dramatic change in our culture. Wake them before they open those damn labor camps. And walk around your neighborhood. Know your territory is a high priority in times of war.

Enable wakeful-responsibility by reducing our dependence on corporate power. To free your mind, free your body. Laziness is a precursor to outside control. Get up, get out.

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GRAVE WARNING about Iran from Scott Ritter
Posted by: DougScott on Feb 26, 2007 9:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
During a speech by Ritter that I attended in Oak Park, CA, on February 23, 2007, the former UN weapons inspector predicted that President Bush would soon attack Iran with a prolonged arial bombardment that could last days, if not weeks.

Ritter noted that two aircraft carrier battle groups were already in the Persian Gulf and two more are on the way. Four battle groups were sufficient to sustain the planned bombing campaign, he said,

Additionally, according to Ritter, Romania has given the Pentagon permission to recover, refuel and rearm long-range bombers launched from the U.S. A ground invasion was also likely, using the 21,500-troop surge ostensibly tasked for Baghdad pacification.

Contrary to White House assertions, Ritter said Iran was not a nuclear threat nor would be for years. For example, its controversial uranium enrichment program has failed to produce significant quantities of weapons-grade fissionable material because of "mass-distribution" problems during centrifuge spin-up, causing the aluminum tubes to disintegrate.

In his closing, Ritter warned that if the pending Iran war went badly, Bush would consider using atomic bombs to achieve victory.

Hugh E. Scott. investigative journalist, Vietnam veteran, ex-USAF pilot and the creator/editor of www.king-George.biz -- the only website with hardcopy proof of White House corruption.

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