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Ominous Signs That White House Advisers Want More Wars

By Jim Lobe, IPS News. Posted April 28, 2008.


Is there a resurgence by the remaining hawks in the Bush administration?
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Are the latest accusations and tough language leveled against Iran, Syria, and North Korea evidence of a resurgence by the remaining hawks in the administration of President George W. Bush hoping for a final confrontation against one or more members of the revised 'axis of evil' before his term next January?

That's the big question here this week, particularly following Thursday's long-awaited intelligence briefings to Congress about alleged North Korean involvement in the construction of a 'covert nuclear reactor' in Syria that was destroyed in a raid by Israeli warplanes in September last year.

According to some interpretations, the briefing's timing and content appeared deliberately designed to raise tensions between Washington, on the one hand, and Pyongyang and Damascus, on the other, potentially derailing ongoing long-running negotiations between the State Department and North Korea and Turkish-mediated peace feelers between Israel and Syria.

That Vice President Dick Cheney, whose opposition to engaging both North Korea and Syria and support for 'regime change' in both countries is both well known and of long standing, had pushed hard for the briefing to take place has added to speculation that a major power play by the hawks to reverse the diplomacy that has dominated Bush's second term is underway.

Rumours that the State Department's point man on North Korea, Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill -- whose latest accord with Pyongyang negotiated in Singapore earlier this month has been the target of fierce right-wing attacks led by Cheney chum, former U.N. Amb. John Bolton -- has told associates that he will resign next month have added to concerns that the hawks have regained the initiative, at least on that front.

Add the promotion of Gen. David Petraeus, the U.S. commander in Iraq who has overseen the past year's 'surge' of U.S. troops, to take over the U.S. Central Command (Centcom) this summer, as well as the increasingly harsh charges against Iran's alleged interference in Iraq that have been coming out of the Pentagon in recent days.

All these developments are seen by some as an answer to the prayers of neo-conservatives, in particular, who had largely given up hopes that Bush could be persuaded to attack Iran's nuclear facilities before leaving office.

In his testimony about the surge earlier this month, Petraeus had repeatedly blamed allegedly Iranian-sponsored and directed Shi'a 'Special Groups' for attacking Iraqi government and U.S. forces in Basra and Baghdad, describing them as 'the greatest long-term threat to the viability of a democratic Iraq'.

And on Friday, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Michael Mullen, who has generally resisted Iran-bashing, conceded that he was 'extremely concerned' about Iran's 'increasingly lethal and malign influence' in Iraq, as well as in other parts of the region.

At the same time, Pentagon officials announced that it will brief reporters next week on newly discovered arms caches in Iraq which they said proved that Iran has not abided by pledges made by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki last fall to curb any cross-border weapons shipments.

Indeed, there appears little question that the rhetoric here has become considerably harsher in recent weeks. The shift became particularly evident in February, when the former Centcom commander and the man whom Petraeus will replace, Adm. William 'Fox' Fallon, abruptly announced his resignation following the publication of a profile in Esquire magazine that depicted him as opposing key administration policies and as the one man standing between Bush and war with Iran.

The blunt-spoken admiral had pushed for diplomatic engagement with Iran and aggressively supported efforts to engage North Korea while serving as head of the Pacific Command (Pacom) earlier in the decade. He was in many ways the point man for the 'realist' faction in the administration led by Pentagon chief Robert Gates and, to a somewhat lesser extent, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.


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Read Jim Lobe's blog on U.S. foreign policy, and particularly the neo-conservative influence in the Bush administration.

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What about the Democratic hawks -- i.e. Hillary Clinton
Posted by: HughScott on Apr 28, 2008 2:08 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mrs. Sniper Fire has threatened to "oblterate" Iran (her words) should it attack Jordan, Eypt, Sadia Aabia or Israel. How crazy is that?

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Also related to the Iraq War: The public lynching of Barack Obama
Posted by: HughScott on Apr 28, 2008 2:32 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since this morning, on TV and radio news broadcasts, I've heard a parade of so-called Americans condemn Rev. Wright for exercising his right to free speech. Many of those same critics, both Democrat and Republican, are demanding that Obama condemn Rev. Wright as well.

Meanwhile, Rev. Hagee, a hate-filled, Bible-pounding homophobe, is free to attack the gay community with impunity. Why? Because he is white and Rev. Wright is black. It's that simple.

Rev, Wright was right. God DAMN America! Or more succinctly, Ameri-KKK-a.

Four years from now, when either McCain or Hillary finish his or her first term in office and the Iraq War is still with us, America will be sorry it lynched Barack Obama.

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» Thanks John Posted by: David/Daoud
Reminds Me Of 1970's Kremlinology
Posted by: gradioc on Apr 28, 2008 3:38 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One of the (many) things that really bothers me about this adminisration is the complete lack of transparency. It is much like the study of the Soviet government during the Cold War. We have no idea who is doing the thinking or which way they will move under duress. We get this speculation about who's up and who's down in forming Bush's views, because, let's face it, it's become obvious the man now in the Oval Office is completely out of his depth. I largely blame the fiasco in Iraq on Rumsfeld and Bremmer. Like all good neocon thinkers, they were often wrong but never unsure and held in contempt any one who dared question their perception of "reality". See also Cheney, Dick.I had hoped that the neocons, now largely centered around Cheney and his office, were so discredited by now that even W had figured out they had no clue, but, hey, you will never go broke betting on our President to do the stupid thing. Even with serious people like Gates and Patreus around him, the fantasy world of neocon thought (boy, there's an oxymoron) keeps springing into Bush's brain. We're already in two damn messes in Iraq and Afghanistan. I can only hope W's term ends before he can lead us into any others.

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Even conservatives are worried
Posted by: fanny666 on Apr 28, 2008 4:02 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From military.com : Operation Cassandra, an article about the "resignation" of Admiral Fallon, the highest-ranking military officer to be outspoken in his opposition to an attack on Iran.

Your reps and Senators can be reached at 202-224-3121

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Wouldn't it be great if . . .
Posted by: Rune on Apr 28, 2008 5:47 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
we could just impeach the bastards and quit worrying about which many horrible options they will choose for their next move toward crime, death, and a diminished future for all? I mean, we're up to, what?, about 50 or 60 major scandals, at least a quarter of which finally have enough evidence behind them to make it difficult not to find Bush and/or Cheney guilty under the law. Do we really need to wait until they have completely and irreversibly screwed up the rest of our lives, short as they may be under the circumstances, before we can do something lawful and reasonable about it?

Ms. Pelosi, her fellow Democratic enablers, anyone, are you listening? Hello?

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» RE: Wouldn't it be great if . . . Posted by: aislinns_lilypad
If Obama Fails
Posted by: Spot on Apr 28, 2008 11:32 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If Obama Fails, the Right Wing will get their four more years. Neither Clinton nor McCain has shown the least bit of remorse for the situation in Iraq, for their BOLDFACE LIES which led to the invasion (don't tell me you honestly think they couldn't have known. I knew.), nor can they honestly be entertaining any thought of troop withdrawal (even the Clinton plan calls for the unending stationing of troops in the Iraqi Desert and our fortress "Green Zone").
So why not expect the right wing to rush to another war?
If Obama fails, there will be no mainstream candidate to oppose a permanent presence in Iraq. If Obama fails, the White House will remain under the coercion of Wall Street's Financial Elite. If Obama fails, A gas tax holiday will distract Americans from the changes we need to make to survive as a culture and as a nation in the face of peak oil and global recession.
There is no guarantee that Obama will be able to solve the crises which will accompany the greatest regression in Human History, but I guarantee you that neither Hillary nor McCain have the personal will to hold firm in the face of the coming pressure or the ideological flexibility to contort our sickly body politic into an agent for positive change.

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the pictures released last week...
Posted by: adp3d on Apr 29, 2008 4:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...looked to me like they could have been of a fake mock-up. If they were "before" pictures the place looked rather abandoned, and if they were "after" pictures it looked like the bombing raid didn't do too much damage. So with that being said, I certainly don't trust the adminstration to tell the truth about anything. And as far as Rice and Gates being realists, now that is a hoot.

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History and the Bush Junta
Posted by: xvictor on Apr 29, 2008 5:42 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
History is full of accounts where those in power make wars on others in a vain attempt to bolster their ever declining influence and fortunes. The Bush regime, for example, is emulating the pathetic behavior of the 1980s Argentine Junta. In a vain attempt to bolster their declining popularity and influence, they had unsuccessfully attempted to wrest the Falkland Islands from Britain by miitary force. The argentine government fell soon afterwards. The Bush Regime will suffer the same fate, in so many ways, because the ill-advised Iranian misadventure will end in catastrophe.

History repeats!!!

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» RE: History and the Bush Junta Posted by: photon's feather
» RE: History and the Bush Junta Posted by: bobtr900
blah, blah, blah...Mental Masturbation
Posted by: JohnJlws on Apr 29, 2008 8:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is a post here with a phone number (202-224-3121). I don't know if it is the right phone number as I haven't called it (if it's wrong, we could go to google and find the right one). I haven't emailed it to my email address book, or asked any of my friends to call it. I haven't put it on Facebook, Myspace, Craigslist, or done anything with it.

Have you?

Why not? Why haven't any of us called this number? I guess we all think that by sitting here and blogging we're somehow accomplishing something other than mental masturbation (you know that process that makes us feel good, but when we get done all we really have is a sticky mess--at least with mental masturbation it's virtual).

If we actually want to stop this mindless crap, we better speak up and it better be more than in the blogosphere and "signing" internet petitions that few in control look at (I know people in control and they, in private, think of those things as silly). And, if we don't want to stop this crap, but just want to be involved in mental masturbation, then we all should probably just understand that and realize that what we write here, amongst pretty much like-minded individuals, hasn't any relevance or impact.

I have to go now. I have some phone calls to make and some letters and editorials to write. This time Barack's voice will at least be heard with mine.

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» Right on. If people have time to post Posted by: Ignatz deFyre
» I wrote my letters Posted by: JohnJlws
» RE: blah, blah, blah...Mental Masturbation Posted by: aislinns_lilypad
War or no war?
Posted by: willymack on Apr 29, 2008 12:33 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There's certainly a lot of saber rattling and speculation about a possible attack on Iran. Maybe the bushies are crazy and evil enough to do it; maybe not. In the meantime, our attention is deflected away from Iraq and our ruined economy-issues we KNOW are real. Deflection, obfuscation,false accusations, and prevarications are all Turdblossom trademarks. He may be forgotten, but he's definitely not gone.

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» RE: War or no war? Posted by: ellie
I Go Pogeaux
Posted by: tom cady on Apr 29, 2008 7:09 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.
-- Voltaire

In a world that contains Laffer Curve, an Axis of Evil, Iraqi Freedom, Mission Accomplished, Clear Skies, Clean Waters, Healthy Forests, Family Values, No Child Left Behind, and a Patriot Act it is a good reminder for our time.

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If American Leaders say "BOMB"...
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Apr 30, 2008 5:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Americans will embrace it like a freaking flag-waiving baby.
(watch from 3:30 onwards, its terrifying... ignore the obnoxious title, its over 18 months old, but a fascinating perspective on Amerikans answering the question, "where should the Amerika invade next in the continued War on Terror?")

TOO BAD THEY NEVER VISIT CUBA: a nation impoverished in environment & resources...
...every cent went to **militarization** to keep the Amerikans from invading again.

Cuba's greatest export? EDUCATED PROFESSIONALS:
doctors, pharmacists, nurses, soil specialists, hydrologists, sports therapists...

for a free education, they pledge to do overseas charity work... for which the Cuban government receives preferred Trade Agreements.

who da bitch now?

~~~
Spread Love...

BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian com
~~~
"We, two, form a Multitude" ~ Ovid.
~~~
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"
"do no harm"

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