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Analysts Fear Disaster in U.S. Course

By Jim Lobe, Inter Press Service. Posted August 15, 2006.


Two big crises -- Iraq and Lebanon -- show signs of becoming one really, really big emergency.
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Alarms are definitely on the rise here.

And it's not just because the British police arrested 21 people who were allegedly plotting to bomb up to 10 jetliners between London and the United States in mid-flight over the Atlantic Ocean. Although that probably didn't help.

It's more the sense that the growing number of crises in the "new Middle East," proudly midwifed by the administration of President George W. Bush, is rapidly spinning out of control with potentially catastrophic consequences for the entire region and beyond.

The ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah -- not to imminent expansion of Israel's invasion of southern Lebanon if it does not get a U.N. Security Council resolution to its liking -- has, by virtually all accounts, inflamed and radicalised the Islamic world and rendered a larger regional conflagration much more likely.

At the same time, Wednesday's report that an unprecedented 1,815 bodies, 90 percent victims of violence, were brought to the Baghdad's morgue last month -- eclipsing the previous record established in June by some 250 corpses -- appeared to confirm the increasingly widespread view here that Iraq is moving headlong towards civil war, if it isn't already in one, as many regional experts have contended for some time.

"Two full-blown crises, in Lebanon and Iraq, are merging into a single emergency," noted Washington's former U.N. Ambassador, Richard Holbrooke, in an uncharacteristically alarming column in Thursday's Washington Post.

The column's title, "The Guns of August," was a reference to a book about the diplomatic follies and indecisive battles that launched Europe into a devastating world war in 1914.

"A chain reaction could spread quickly almost anywhere between Cairo and Bombay," Holbrooke warned. "...The combination of combustible elements poses the greatest threat to global stability since the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, history's only nuclear superpower confrontation."

Among other things, noted Holbrooke, a top candidate for secretary of state if Democrats had won the presidency in 2000 or 2004, Turkey is threatening to invade northern Iraq; the world's largest anti-Israel demonstrations are taking place in downtown Baghdad; Syria may yet be pulled into the Lebanon war; Afghanistan is under growing threat from a resurgent Taliban; and India is threatening about punitive action against Pakistan for its alleged involvement in the recent train bombings in Bombay.

Particularly alarming to Holbrooke, as to a steadily growing number of Republican realists and other members of the traditional U.S. foreign policy elite, is the apparent complacency of the Bush administration in the face of these events.

Indeed, since the outbreak of the Lebanon crisis four weeks ago, a succession of former top Republican policy-makers -- including Brent Scowcroft, the national security adviser to former presidents Gerald Ford and George H.W. Bush; the younger Bush's former deputy secretary of state, Richard Armitage; and Council on Foreign Relations President Richard Haass -- has called publicly for a major reassessment of U.S. Middle East policy and its conduct of the "global war on terror."

Their common message is the necessity of pressing Israel for a quick ceasefire in Lebanon, engaging directly with Syria and Iran on both Lebanon and Iraq, and restarting a serious peace process between Israel and the Palestinians. It has been echoed by leading Democrats, including former President Jimmy Carter; his national security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski; and former secretaries of state Warren Christopher and Madeleine Albright, as well as by Holbrooke himself.

To these appeals, however -- as well as to the worsening of the twin crises themselves -- the administration has appeared largely deaf. "There is little public sign that the president and his top advisers recognise how close we are to a chain reaction, or that they have any larger strategy beyond tactical actions," Holbrooke noted.

The one, at least partial, exception has been Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice whose State Department, a bastion of realism, has been under almost constant attack since the outset of the Lebanon crisis by the same coalition of neo-conservatives, assertive nationalists, and Christian rightists led by Vice President Dick Cheney that led the drive to war in Iraq.

In the early stages of the latest war, Rice, who is also the only senior administration official who has been in constant communication with European and Arab leaders, was most outspoken about the importance of Israel exercising restraint and not attacking civilian infrastructure in Lebanon. She was reportedly infuriated when Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert failed to follow through on a pledge to suspend aerial attacks for two days late last month.

Rice, a Scowcroft protégée, has supported talks with Syria on the crisis, and, according to an account published this week in Insight magazine, a publication of the right-wing Washington Times, has also argued in favour of engaging Iran.

Before the Lebanon crisis, Rice appeared to be successfully moving U.S. policy gradually, if fitfully, towards a more realist position, particularly with respect to Iran. But she has now run into a brick wall in Bush himself, according to Insight.

"For the last 18 months, Condi was given nearly carte blanche in setting foreign policy guidelines," it quoted one "senior government source" as saying. "All of a sudden, the president has a different opinion and he wants the last word."

Her problems, however, may not be confined to Bush, according to another report in Thursday's New York Times, which suggested that Cheney -- and his mainly neo-conservative advisers -- has become increasingly assertive in the latest crisis in support of Israel's efforts to crush Hezbollah. (In fact, some of his unofficial advisers, such as Weekly Standard editor William Kristol and former Defence Policy Board chairman Richard Perle, have called for expanding the war to Syria and even Iran.)

In that respect, the current situation recalls the humiliation of then-Secretary of State Colin Powell's who in early 2002 sought to persuade Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to halt Israel's military offensive in the Palestinian territories -- only to be undercut back home by Cheney and, ironically, by then-national security adviser Rice herself.

"She had as much to do with cutting his legs out from under him vis-à-vis the Middle East as anyone else -- either through outright agreement with Cheney, or, at the minimum, complicity with his views so as to draw even closer to Bush," according to ret. Col Lawrence Wilkerson, Powell's former chief of staff at the State Department.

That experience, of course, confirmed the demise of realist influence in Bush's first term, at least with respect to the Middle East.

That Rice may now find herself in a similar position, having to contend with a resurgent Cheney-led coalition of hawks who are not so much complacent about the course of current events in the Middle East as convinced that their strategy of regional "transformation" by military means will be vindicated, is what is perhaps particularly alarming about the present moment.

"This whole business is nuts -- unless, of course, you believe what the rumor-mongers are beginning to pass around," wrote Wilkerson in reference to the Lebanon war in an email exchange with IPS. "(T)hat this entire affair was ginned up by Bush/Cheney and certain political leaders in Tel Aviv to give cover for the eventual attack by the U.S. on Iran. At first, I refused to believe what seemed to be such insanity. But I am not so certain any longer."

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Jim Lobe is the Washington bureau chief for Inter Press Service.

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"Non Conventional" Weapons May Be Used!
Posted by: Sleepingcobra1 on Aug 15, 2006 12:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If Israel and Syria get's into it, their is a talk about "Non Conventional" Weapons used.

http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=208021

I believe this is more serious that we think.

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The view from Europe is this: this is a BIG crisis
Posted by: Bobsays on Aug 15, 2006 2:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I know it is difficult from the perspective and comfort of North America to judge how serious the global situation is. It is easy to go into the backyard and spark up the BBQ and forget about it. But here in Europe, where we are living jammed right up beside militant islamists, it feels incendiary.

I think a perfect storm of events is heading for an October conflagration. Plans have long been drawn up to do this, and we can judge from the absence of Tony Blair during the Israel/Lebanon war, that he feels confident everything is going to plan.

I am very worried for several reasons. One, is that once things kick off, it becomes very difficult to manage all events. As we can see from Iraq, talking a lot about democracy isn't going to make it happen.

The anger in Arab countries is huge. They may not be able to have influence over their governments, but as we saw in Lebanon, they are happy to build networks and organisations outside the state.

I think the power resides in the hands of Americans to encourage a new debate and to get new politicians to step forward and fight for a change in policy in the next month or two. That's all we got.

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» Guess you are right.... Posted by: daro
really big trouble
Posted by: rsaxto on Aug 15, 2006 3:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Cheney/Bush gang has got to be removed before they get us into really big trouble in the world which other folks would be powerless to contain. Cheney, in particular, is the world's most immoral warmongering death promoter.

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» RE: really big trouble Posted by: Gregor
» RE: really big trouble Posted by: sik49
sickofsleaze
Posted by: ladybug1@carrollsweb.com on Aug 15, 2006 4:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You better believe it is a crisis now and getting worse tho my vocabulary doesn't contain a word for a situation beyond crisis. The underlying problem is the people "handling" the crisis are not equipped to do so.

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» RE: sickofsleaze Posted by: Herestratus
» RE: sickofsleaze Posted by: sik49
» RE: sickofsleaze Posted by: sik49
the twin crisis = smokescreen of the REAL Emergency
Posted by: wawa on Aug 15, 2006 4:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The 'twins' are obfuscating the REAL crisis in the Holy Land,
a partial list [excerpted Aug. 14 WAWA blog] includes:


1. Four decades of Israeli occupation of Palestinian territory

2. Millions of refugees who are not allowed to return home and millions who cannot get passports to leave the 58 year old refugee camps, which are ghettos.

3. Over 100 unrecognized villages in Israel where Arab's have been given Israeli citizenship and pay taxes but receive no services; no electricity, no water, no medical, no schools, no respect, no human rights.

4. 4,170 Palestinian Homes which have been demolished without reason or compensation since 2000[http://www.ifamericansknew.org/]

5. A concrete wall/electrified fence that does not follow the Green Line and has been deemed illegal by the International Court of Justice and must come down, but continues to grab Palestinian land, water and divides families and prevents farmers from tending their land.

6. 9,599 Palestinians prisoners are being held, many without charges and access to legal council, and many of these are woman and children.

7. 60+ new Jewish-only settlements have been built on confiscated Palestinian land between March 2001 and July 11, 2003. [IBID]

8. The U.S. gives $15,139,178 per day to the Israeli government and military and has furnished billions in weapons of destruction.


There would NOT be a militant Hezzbolah or Hamas if Israel had adhered to International Law, UN Resolutions, International Law and if USA had NOT been supplying billions in weapons of destruction that continues the occupation.


"We have seen the enemy and he is US"-Pogo


END the OCCUPATION and there will be a new Middle East.

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2 1/2 more years of the Bush/Christian extremist/neocon/Izrael cabal
Posted by: marklar on Aug 15, 2006 4:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There's not elling what disasters are looming ahead of us. It seems ever month there's something and one say how much worse can it get? We ain't seen nuthin' yet.

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ME CONFLAGRATION
Posted by: itchyvet on Aug 15, 2006 4:59 AM   
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DUH, what does it take, to get it through people's thick skulls, that the U.S. Administration is 100 % supportive of inciting WW 3.
No IF'S, BUTTS about it.
Read PANPAC, they make no secret of their intentions, never have, it's only the idiot gullible public who wish to delude themselves.
The World was warned of escalating events culminating in total war and this is precisely what's happening, anyone who thinks otherwise is deluding themselves, just as the designers are accused of doing in the Whitehouse.
The outcome has also been predicted, that is the demise of the U.S. as we know it, some have even claimed that this outcome is the desired outcome of the planners anyway.

So take note folks, and wake up, past precident no longer applies to anything, this is serious no holds barred business.

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THE BEAST.......
Posted by: Captainmagic on Aug 15, 2006 5:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
NOW CAN YOU SEE THE BEAST.....to any soldier worth his salt, it is in front of you...you know how it comes...and it is coming....remember these days as though they are forever,and know those that are truely perpetrators in this time of catastrophe in our field of humanity. Can you see the path that is laid out in front of you, maybe not so from a civillians perspective but you the long term soldier, you are looking and you see it, and you can smell it. IT is all unravelling in front of your eyes...remember those who have lied...my fear is that (it will) be before the US elections. They will plunge you before they go....(it's the way they have been doing business so far) and there may be no return.....Oh and just an aside....when the beginning of the open warfare starts you can expect to lose the internet..but for strategical areas of interest that is (ME) etc... so start developing an alternative to this medium....and wait for the lies...

Humbly Yours Captain

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» RE: THE BEAST....... Posted by: Gregor
» RE: THE BEAST....... Posted by: molotov
IMPEACHMENT
Posted by: Tom Degan on Aug 15, 2006 5:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Can there be any argument against impeachment? Do you realize how important it is that the republicans not retain control of both houses of congress in November? Are you aware of the implications if this half-witted, murderous, twisted little dirtbag is allowed free reign for the final two years of his term? They must be removed from power. Not just the "president" (in name only, I assure you) but the entire tidal wave of human shit that comprises his administration - The most blatantly criminal administration in the history of human folly.

If we are stupid enough to hand over our government to the republican party in November, we'll deserve everything that happens to us. We've got to stop this madness.

Take this to the bank:
In the days preceeding the November elections, you know damn good and well that the'll pull some kind of "red alert" stunt in order to keep the people from the polls - particularly the people of color. They will send out the alarm that the urban areas of the northeast and the midwest are in imminent danger of attack. Getting the vote out two and a half months from now will be all the more difficult for this very reason. We've got to start working on our counter offensive. There's just too much at stake. Yeah, it's THAT serious.

If you have any doubt that your country has been taken over by criminals, you've got to be taking "stupid pills".

Pray for peace.

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
"The Rant" by Tom Degan

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» RE: IMPEACHMENT Posted by: FedererFan
» RE: IMPEACHMENT - evidence Posted by: aurora2484
» RE: IMPEACHMENT - evidence Posted by: elmertwittle
» RE: IMPEACHMENT - Now is the time Posted by: aurora2484
» RE: IMPEACHMENT Posted by: willymack
Anyone notice the CFR members listed in this article, who are now all of a sudden worried???
Posted by: Prophit on Aug 15, 2006 6:26 AM   
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How come they haven't said anything til now after 6 years of this garbage????

Its an interesting article expecially in light of the fact these CFR foreign policy experts listed have "changed" their position NOW on the Middle East and are worried there is going to be a world war III. I brought this up before. More world wars then ever before since 1913. The CFR members are always around helping to direct foreign policy in that direction. Why is that??? Right now they have a major paper out about regionalizing this continent in the north which you know does away with sovereignty and its the next step in globalizing. Where is the least homogenized area to the rest of the world??? The middle east of course.

This whole thing reminds me of a fencing match. Parry, thrust, withdraw, parry, thrust, with draw. Sound familiar?? Right now we are in the"thrust" with the neocons, and soon the dems with their members of the CFR in control of the state dept will do the "withdraw" and "parry" parts when they get in to office as CFR ALWAYS controls the state dept.

Notice one of them was Scrowcroft who is now a member of the Carlyle group and I am sure you all know who that is! What is going on here. And notice which party they are from, oh, dear, both parties.

CFR Members listed in article:

Richard Holbrook
Richard Haass
Richard Armitage
Brent Scowcroft,
Zbigniew Brzezinski
Warren Christopher
Madeleine Albright,

If we have a crisis, its that we are being so friggen manipulated into the agenda they want that its not even funny. I am amazed that no one else sees this like I do. Oh, well, I guess as in the past I will be the conspiracy nut until proven right as in the past as well. We are in deep dodoo if these are the people who will be back running our state dept.

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LOOK MOM, I'M A 'UNITER'
Posted by: cognitorex on Aug 15, 2006 6:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
(President Bush softly sings.)

I miss Arafat in the Springtime,
I miss Saddam in the fall,
Lebanon‘s a mess, it‘s in splinters,
I had no idea at all.

Our only pal, Saudi’s being squeezed cause of Palestine,
And Hugo’s kissing sheiks, what gall,
Rummy says they fight less in the winter,
I had no idea at all.

Condi says this mess is a great opportunity,
Some laugh, but what constitutes reality, is my call,
Every planetary entity hates us, look Mom, I"m a ‘Uniter’,
Bombs Away, bombs away, you’all.

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WE'VE GOT TO BRING THEM DOWN NOW!
Posted by: krose on Aug 15, 2006 8:52 AM   
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DOING WHATEVER IT TAKES!

WE NEED THE DEMS TO HELP US.

IF THEY DO NOT, THEY WILL BE OUT!

ANY IDEAS?

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Crisis Ahead! Left Full Rudder!
Posted by: monkeywrench on Aug 15, 2006 10:00 AM   
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From the article:
" 'A chain reaction could spread quickly almost anywhere between Cairo and Bombay," Holbrooke warned. "...The combination of combustible elements poses the greatest threat to global stability since the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, history's only nuclear superpower confrontation.' "

If George Bush had been president during the Cuban Missile Crisis, today we would still be dealing with abandoned cities that are glow-in-the-dark wastelands, and we would pay our respects to the millions of lost innocents in cemetaries stretching over every hill and dale.

I cannot believe that there are still those in Washington that cling to the fiction that any sort of reassessment of our foreign policy can be had from the authoritarian, pig-headed oligarchy under which we all suffer. Will these people never learn? You might as well ask Hitler to abandon the goals of the Third Reich. The only way to get any "reassessment" is to kick the Little Dictator and his henchmen out of office. How close to the abyss do we have to be before all the little lemmings in Congress wake up and do their duty to the nation? (If this lunatic president and anti-Christ Cheney stay in office until 2008, will we still HAVE a nation?)

It absolutely puckers my nether regions to realize that we may be confronting a similar, or worse, situation than CMC with a band of lunatics at the helm. I fear our "Ship of Fools" has made too sharp a right turn and is steaming full speed ahead toward the edge of Bush's flat Earth. Live for today – the party may soon be over.

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Go to D.C. 9/11-9/18
Posted by: buffaloT on Aug 15, 2006 10:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
http://www.striketheroot.org/
911citizenscourt.com
We're still "the people."

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starchildjulius
Posted by: starchild on Aug 15, 2006 12:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes Jim, the truth is at the end of your piece. Of course it's a trumped up, way overblown terror tactic for us (Americans,
brits) to become further terrorized. And, in passing, making it even more inconvenient for us to fly, thereby infringing on our freedom once again. Use a natural catastrophe (desperate men planning a plot, hurricanes, tsunamis) to divide the world further into the have and have nots.

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Impeachment is the solution to this crisis
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Aug 15, 2006 3:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As several of the above posts point out, we as American citizens need to put a stop to this insanity. No matter what Bush's publicists have to say, he is going to continue down this path, led by the neocon crazies and their oil crony backers. If we impeach this crook that will be a message to the world that we aren't putting up with it.

The benefits will be a great weakening of the hand of the crazies in the Mideast - the Iranian clerics and the Al Queda / Bin Ladins. Bush has done more to give aid and comfort to terrorism then any other world leader - he's the reason the moderate wing of Iranian politics was tossed out; he's the reason Al Queda got established in Iraq - and you had better believe that Saudi Arabia could go the same way that Iran did some 25 years ago, when the Shah was our great ally - just like the Saudi Royals are our great ally today. Political reform in Saudi Arabia is desperately needed - but Bush has to go, and Cheney with him - dual articles of impeachment.

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» Touch wood Posted by: srqwolf
» RE: Touch wood Posted by: aurora2484
You're all behaving as if a free electoral system still exists...
Posted by: wisewebwoman on Aug 15, 2006 5:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And it doesn't. Not with the evidence of Florida in 2000 and the Diebold Debacle of 2004 in Ohio and of course the millions of blacks who could change the outcome all in prison for minor offences and with no audit trails on any of the supposedly "free" elections, they were/are and will be stolen. The only way out, in my humble opinion is a revolution and civil disobedience. Democracy has fallen and it can't get up. This is frightening beyond measure. I, for one, am terror-stricken that the world has come to this.

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among other things
Posted by: gacaiola on Aug 15, 2006 5:50 PM   
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the paragraph starting "among other things" makes no sense. Could someone interpret?

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» RE: among other things Posted by: aurora2484
» RE: among other things Posted by: Asses of Evil
» RE: among other things Posted by: aurora2484
» RE: among other things Posted by: Plenum
My 2 cents
Posted by: cold2touch on Aug 16, 2006 10:01 AM   
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Consider the predicament that Cheney and Bush find themselves in: they hitched their wagon to rabid Zionist neocon philosophy and now that the whole thing is tumbling down the cliff, it is too late to get off, they must see it to the end, even whip it onward.
There is a good chance as Alberto Gonzales warned while he was the WH counsel, that they will all be liable for war crimes prosecution (including death penalty) once their term expires, so what to do?
Make sure it does not expire, have a USA-based coup!
As a "War President", all laws constraining him become null and void in this interpretation, just make sure the war is never ending and always escalating.
So everybody grab a shovel and start digging foxholes for themselves and their families rather than worry about Congressional elections.

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Holbrooke is part of the problem
Posted by: dingo on Aug 16, 2006 11:01 AM   
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I love these "centrist democrats" who helped oil the invasion of Iraq and now come to the shocked realization that they've handed the car keys to a band of deranged maniacs.

Now they're having second thoughts?

Now the Cheney cabal is threatening to start a war with Iran. And yet all these Clinton, Kerry, Holbrooke ‘realists’ have done is to serve as enablers. (Let’s not even mention the Leibermans and Bidens who are nothing more than spear-carriers for a virulent strain of imperial hubris.)

The craven cowardice of the Democratic Party has helped set the stage for this disaster and now they are alarmed?

Here’s Ari Berman in The Nation:

Holbrooke, who's been dubbed the "closest thing the party has to a Kissinger" by one foreign policy analyst, even tacked to Bush's right, arguing in February 2003 that anything less than an invasion of Iraq would undermine international law. Many of the officials held high-ranking positions in the Kerry campaign. Holbrooke, frequently mentioned as a potential Secretary of State, urged Kerry to keep his vision on Iraq "deliberately vague,"

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20050829/berman

That tells you all you need to know about Richard Holbrooke and the “realist”, “centrist” Clinton-Kerry Democrats. Holbrooke is part of the problem, not the solution.

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zoot suit
Posted by: zootsuit on Aug 16, 2006 12:55 PM   
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Greetings. I wish we would get awaay from saying the US is the problem. It is the VP Cheney that is the problem. The majority of US citizens want the US to be a fair broker not to have the Israelies be a proxy for Cheney's (not the US) ambitions. Cheney has made the US look like we are warmongers. We should wake up. Citizens unite and make sure you vote in Nov!!!!!

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darby1936
Posted by: darby1936 on Aug 16, 2006 2:43 PM   
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Oh boy! Are we spreading freedom and democracy or what?!? If we play our cards right Isreal might let us use bunker busters on Iran.

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We need a fresh start
Posted by: wobblies on Aug 17, 2006 6:52 PM   
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Hi

We need a fresh start. The United States needs to completely review our foreign policy objectives and strategies. It is in our long term national interest to help the under-developed world on its feet: we should also stop trying to control the world militarily instead of influencing the world with our ideas and practice.

The Cold War was a mistake: we should have reached out to all people that were devastated by WWII instead of limiting our help to the non-Communist world. We should have reached out to third world countries that were emerging from Colonialism and offered to help them get on their feet so that they could provide for the general welfare of their countrymen.

We should have embraced Castro. The young man and his cohorts would have been receptive to establishing Democratic institutions were it not for American efforts to maintain control of the Island. Castro was part of that vanguard of colonized peoples that demanded freedom. An alliance with Cuba would greatly improve our relationship with peoples in the Western Hemisphere. Instead, we got on the wrong side of history.

Obviously, we should have avoided engagement in Southeast Asia: Ho was also receptive to Western progressive thought regarding Democracy. Toppling the Mosaddeq was a terrible, short-sighted blunder. It’s pretty obvious that arming Hussein was a mistake.

Our relationship with Israel is one of the worst mistakes in recent memory. I mean by that, not a commitment to provide shelter for the traumatized people reacting to the holocaust, but our acceptance of the genocide of the Palestinian people in order to establish the new country: we have blindly stood by while Israel militarily extended its borders and expelled the existing people from those lands in Palestine, Lebanon, and Syria.

Sentient beings across the planet knew the conquest of Iraq was an enormous travesty but had to watch it unfold on TV. Now, we see that George wants to extend his war machine into Persia, and Democrats are chafing at the bit to show that they can be just as jingoist.

We need to understand the Iranian Revolution: it was a massive public uprising of the Iranian people. They wanted to end the brutal dictatorship of our puppet in the country. Carter failed to grasp the significance of that. He should have embraced the revolution without support for any faction in the country. Those Democratic forces in the country were isolated by continued US hostility. He should have promised to step aside while the international community helped them establish Democratic institutions that would make it possible for Iran to choose a new social order. They would likely have supported those Democratic institutions as a means of expressing those preferences. Our bungling set back that struggle for decades.

We had enjoyed very close ties with the Iranian public for decades before the revolution. Immigration into America was one of the ways that we bonded with one another. Many of us from that generation have fond memories of those friendships. There is every reason to believe that we could use that old relationship to rekindle the warm relations we once enjoyed.

Before closing, I want to review two issues: Israel and Democracy. We have to be very careful to avoid creating instability when we change our policy toward Israel: we should extend any military or other alliances that we have to all of Palestine with a proviso that our aid may not be used against the people of Palestine or its neighbor as part of an effort to keep confiscated land. I mean by Democracy, popular control of government: I do not mean to equate Democracy as a political system with Capitalism which is an economic system.

God Speed,
David

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Playing the public - Understanding human nature
Posted by: unreceived wisdom on Aug 19, 2006 2:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For the Bush/Rice/Republican strategy to work, Americans must be led to conflate capitalism and democracy. It could work only if these two very different disciplines, one an economic model the other a political model, always go hand in glove. The current state of the world shows otherwise. The dictatorship in China now allows a capitalist economy to thrive. And in democratic Europe, socialism prevails. Humans are like most other social species: their overriding allegiance is to their genetically closest relatives. In the Middle East, the people are inbred to a larger extent than in the west. They are not drawn to a system of individual accomplishments and accountability. They have their first allegiance to their clan. They expect to be told what to do. Democracy cannot work in this culture. Ideas do not prevail, just numbers. What the republican think tanks decided is that Americans would not go for a war that was only intended to open markets to American domination, so it had to be a war for freedom and democracy. The first acts of the Bremer provisional authority were to de-nationalize all of Iraqs state run businesses. unemployment, corruption and chaos resulted. Bush and Rice have been played for fools by Iran. While it is true that the oil companies are benefitting greatly from their gaming of the oil supply, the other beneficiaries are Iran, Venezuela, and other anti-American states that have oil. We offered Iraq democracy and brought on a civil war. We created another failed state where Islamic fascists can seize power. We forced elections on the Palestinians without including a referendum on the two state solution. The result? The election of Hamas. That Bush and Cheney have made billions for their friends in Americas largest corporation (where do you think all those defense dollars go?) they also may have dimmed the prospects for a better future for the great majority of the American people. Could we already have peaked as a nation? Are we already in decline? We have lost the ability to fight a war and win since this requires killing populations in large numbers. But if our very survival is threatened, it may come to that. But if Iran has nukes, it may be too late.

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