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So ... Empire?

Posted: 2003-03-13 07:29am
by Vympel
Food for thought.

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This war came from a think tank

by Jochen Boelsche, spiegel

It was in no way a conspiracy. As far back as 1998, ultra right US think tanks had developed and published plans for an era of US world domination, sidelining the UN and attacking Iraq. These people were not taken seriously. But now they are calling the tune.

German commentators and correspondents have been confused. Washington has tossed around so many types of reasons for war on Baghdad "that it could make the rest of the world dizzy", said the South German Times.

And the Nuremburg News reported on public statements last week by Presidential spokesman Ari Fleischer to an inner circle in the US that war can only be avoided if Saddam not only disarms, but also leaves office.

Regime change is a condition that is in none of the barely remembered 18 UN resolutions. The Nuremburg News asked in astonishment whether Fleischer had made the biggest Freudian slip of his career or whether he spoke with the President's authority.

It's not about Saddam's weapons

So it goes. Across the world critics of President Bush are convinced that a second Gulf War is actually about replacing Saddam, whether the dictator is involved with WMD or not. "It's not about his WMD," writes the German born Israeli peace campaigner, Uri Avnery, "its purely a war about world domination, in business, politics, defence and culture".

There are real models for this. They were already under development by far right Think Tanks in the 1990s, organisations in which cold-war warriors from the inner circle of the secret services, from evangelical churches, from weapons corporations and oil companies forged shocking plans for a new world order.

In the plans of these hawks a doctrine of "might is right" would operate, and the mightiest of course would be the last superpower, America.

Visions of world power on the Web

To this end the USA would need to use all means - diplomatic, economic and military, even wars of aggression - to have long term control of the resources of the planet and the ability to keep any possible rival weak.

These 1990's schemes of the Think Tanks, from sidelining the UN to a series of wars to establish dominance - were in no way secret. Nearly all these scenarios have been published; some are accessible on the Web.

For a long time these schemes were shrugged off as fantasy produced by intellectual mavericks - arch-conservative relics of the Reagan era, the coldest of cold-war warriors, hibernating in backwaters of academia and lobby groups.

At the White House an internationalist spirit was in the air. There was talk of partnerships for universal human rights, of multi-lateralism in relations with allies. Treaties on climate-change, weapons control, on landmines and international justice were on the agenda.

Saddam's fall was planned in 1998

In this liberal climate there came, nearly unnoticed, a 1997 proposal of the Project for the New American Century (PNAC) that forcefully mapped out "America's global leadership". On 28 Jan 1998 the PNAC project team wrote to President Clinton demanding a radical change in dealings with the UN and the end of Saddam.

While it was not clear whether Saddam was developing WMD, he was, they said, a threat to the US, Israel, the Arab States and "a meaningful part of the world's oil reserves". They put their case as follows:

"In the short term this means being ready to lead military action, without regard for diplomacy. In the long term it means disarming Saddam and his regime. We believe that the US has the right under existing Security Council resolutions to take the necessary steps, including war, to secure our vital interests in the Gulf. In no circumstances should America's politics be crippled by the misguided insistence of the Security Council on unanimity." (clintonletter)


Blueprint for an offensive

This letter might have remained yellowing in the White House archives if it did not read like a blue-print for a long-desired war, and still might have been forgotten if ten PNAC members had not signed it. These signatories are today all part of the Bush Administration. They are Dick Cheney - Vice President, Lewis Libby - Cheney's Chief of Staff, Donald Rumsfeld - Defence Minister, Paul Wolfowitz - Rumsfeld's deputy, Peter Rodman - in charge of 'Matters of Global Security', John Bolton - State Secretary for Arms Control, Richard Armitage - Deputy Foreign Minister, Richard Perle - former Deputy Defence Minister under Reagan, now head of the Defense Policy Board, William Kristol - head of the PNAC and adviser to Bush, known as the brains of the President, Zalmay Khalilzad - fresh from being special ambassador and kingmaker in Afghanistan, now Bush's special ambassador to the Iraqi opposition.

But even before that - over ten years ago - two hardliners from this group had developed a defence proposal that created a global scandal when it was leaked to the US press. The suggestion that was revealed in 1992 in The New York Times was developed by two men who today are Cabinet members - Wolfowitz and Libby. It essentially argued that the doctrine of deterrence used in the Cold War should be replaced by a new global strategy.

Its goal was the enduring preservation of the superpower status of the US - over Europe, Russia and China. Various means were proposed to deter potential rivals from questioning America's leadership or playing a larger regional or global role. The paper caused major concerns in the capitals of Europe and Asia.

But the critical thing, according to the Wolfowitz-Libby paper, was complete American dominance of Eurasia. Any nation there that threatened the USA by acquiring WMD should face pre-emptive attack, they said. Traditional alliances should be replaced by ad-hoc coalitions.

This 1992 masterplan then formed the basis of a PNAC paper that was concluded in September 2000, just months before the start of the Bush Administration.

That September 2000 paper (Rebuilding America's Defences) was developed by Rumsfeld, Cheney, Wolfowitz and Libby, and is devoted to matters of "maintaining US pre-eminence, thwarting rival powers and shaping the global security system according to US interests". (RAD)

The cavalry on the new frontier

Amongst other things, this paper said, the USA must re-arm and build a missile shield in order to put itself in a position to fight numerous wars simultaneously and chart its own course. Whatever happened, the Gulf would have to be in US control:

"The US has sought for years to play an ongoing role in the security architecture of the Gulf. The unresolved conflict with Iraq provides a clear basis for our presence, but quite independent of the issue of the Iraqi regime, a substantial US presence in the Gulf is needed."

The paper describes these US forces stationed overseas in the raw language of the Wild West, calling them "the Cavalry on the New American Frontier". Even peace efforts, the paper continues, should have the stamp of the USA rather than the UN.

Gun-at-the-head diplomacy

Scarcely had President Bush (jnr) won his controversial election victory and replaced Clinton than he brought the hardliners from the PNAC into his administration. The old campaigner Richard Perle (who once told the Hamburg Times about 'gun-at-the-head diplomacy') found himself in the key role at the Defense Policy Board. This board operates in close cooperation with Pentagon boss Rumsfeld.

At a breath-taking pace the new power-bloc began implementing the PNAC strategy. Bush ditched international treaty after international treaty, shunned the UN and began treating allies as inferiors. After the attacks of 11 September, as fear ruled the US and anthrax letters circulated, the Bush cabinet clearly took the view that the time was ripe to dust off the PNAC plans for Iraq.

Just six days after 11 September, Bush signed an order to prepare for war against the terror network and the Taliban. Another order went to the military, that was secret initially, instructing them to develop scenarios for a war in Iraq.

A son of a bitch, but our son of a bitch

Of course the claims of Iraqi control of the 11 September hijackers never were proven, just like the assumption that Saddam was involved with the anthrax letters (they proved to be from sources in the US Military). But regardless, Richard Perle claimed in a TV interview that "there can be no victory in the war on terror if Saddam remains in power".

The dictator, demanded Perle, must be deposed by the US as a matter of priority "because he symbolises contempt for all Western values". But Saddam had always been that way, even when he gained power in Iraq with US backing.

At that time a Secret Service officer from the US embassy in Baghdad reported to CIA Headquarters: "I know Saddam is a son of a bitch, but he is our son of a bitch". And after the US had supported the dictator in his war with Iran, the retired CIA Director Robert Gates says he had no illusions about Saddam. The dictator, says Gates "was never a reformer, never a democrat, just a common criminal".

But the PNAC paper does not make clear why Washington now wants to declare war, even without UN support, on its erstwhile partner.

A shining example of freedom

There is a lot of evidence that Washington wants to remove the Iraqi regime in order to bring the whole Middle East more fully under its economic sphere of influence. Bush puts it somewhat differently - after a liberation that is necessitated by breaches of international law, Iraq "will serve as a dramatic and shining exampled of freedom to other nations of the region".

Experts like Udo Steinbach, Director of the German-Orient Institute in Hamburg, have doubts about Bush's bona fides. Steinbach describes the President's announcement last week of a drive to democratise Iraq as "a calculated distortion aimed at justifying war".

There is nothing currently to indicate that Bush truly is pursuing democratisation in the region.

"Particularly in Iraq," says Steinbach, "I cannot convince myself that after the fall of Saddam something democratic could take shape."

Control the flow of oil, control your rivals

This so called pre-emptive war that the PNAC ideologues have longed for against Iraq also serves, in the judgement of Uri Avnery, to take the battle to Europe and Japan. It brings US dominance of Eurasia closer.

Avnery notes:

"American occupation of Iraq would secure US control not only of the extensive oil reserves of Iraq, but also the oil of the Caspian Sea and the Gulf States. With control of the supply of oil the US can stall the economies of Germany, France and Japan at will, just by manipulating the oil price. A lower price would damage Russia, a higher one would shaft Germany and Japan. That's why preventing this war is essential to Europe's interests, apart from Europeans' deep desire for peace."

"Washington has never been shy about its desire to tame Europe," argues Avnery. In order to implement his plans for world dominance, says Avnery, "Bush is prepared to spill immense quantities of blood, so long as it's not American blood".

The world will toe the American line

The arrogance of the hawks in the US administration, and their plan to have the world toe their line while they decide on war or peace, shocks experts like the international law expert Hartmut Schiedermair from Cologne. The American "crusading zeal" that can make such statements he says is "highly disturbing".

Similarly Harald Mueller - a leading peace researcher - has long criticised the German Government for "assiduously overlooking and tacitly endorsing" the dramatic shift in US foreign policy of 2001. He says the agenda of the Bush administration is unmistakable:

"America will do as it pleases. It will obey international law if it suits, and break that law or ignore it if necessary ... The USA wants total freedom for itself, to be the aristocrat of world politics."

Infatuated with war

Even senior politicians in countries backing a second Gulf War are appalled by the radicals in the White House.

Beginning last year, responding to the PNAC study, long-serving Labour MP Tam Dalyell raged against it in the House of Commons:

"This is rubbish from right wing think tanks where bird-brained war-mongers huddle together - people who have never experienced the horror of war, but are infatuated with the idea of it."

Even his own leader got a broad-side: "I am appalled that a Labour PM would hop into bed with such a troop of moral pygmies."

[Vympel: :lol: ]

Across the Atlantic in mid February, Democrat Senator Robert Byrd (at 86 years of age the so-called "Father of the Senate") spoke out. The longest serving member of that Chamber warned the pre-emptive war that the Right were advocating was a "distortion of long-standing concepts of the right of self-defence" and "a blow against international law". Bush's politics, he said "could well be a turning point in world history" and "lay the foundation for anti-Americanism" across much of the world. (Byrd's speech is at A lonely voice in a US Senate silent on war.)

Holding the rest of the world in contempt

One person who is absolutely unequivocal about the problem of anti-Americanism is former President Jimmy Carter. He judges the PNAC agenda in the same way. At first, argues Carter, Bush responded to the challenge of September 11 in an effective and intelligent way, "but in the meantime a group of conservatives worked to get approval for their long held ambitions under the mantle of 'the war on terror'".

The restrictions on civil rights in the US and at Guantanamo, cancellation of international accords, "contempt for the rest of the world", and finally an attack on Iraq "although there is no threat to the US from Baghdad" - all these things will have devastating consequences, according to Carter.

"This entire unilateralism", warns the ex-President, "will increasingly isolate the US from those nations that we need in order to do battle with terrorism".

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Posted: 2003-03-13 07:58am
by Enforcer Talen
hell, why not.

Posted: 2003-03-13 09:50am
by theski
Vympel, so a bunch of peace activists write an article.. I give it as much criedence as you would if the Rand Corp wrote an opposing peace. Seems the political and Ideological split on this BBs is wide and never the 2 shall meet but WTF it is good fun!! :twisted:

Posted: 2003-03-13 10:02am
by Crown
Damn, my dad was right... Who could have thought?

Seriously though, that these kind of people and thoughts exist, isn't too terribly suprising to me. Whether or not, the US will go that far, is something I really can't answer.

Posted: 2003-03-13 10:14am
by Next of Kin
theski wrote:Vympel, so a bunch of peace activists write an article.. I give it as much criedence as you would if the Rand Corp wrote an opposing peace. Seems the political and Ideological split on this BBs is wide and never the 2 shall meet but WTF it is good fun!! :twisted:
...attacking the source and not the message, eh?

Posted: 2003-03-13 10:26am
by theski
Next, just a little to tired this morning to pars it out line by line.. Need a sledgehammer from Starbucks :lol:

Posted: 2003-03-13 10:27am
by Next of Kin
theski wrote:Next, just a little to tired this morning to pars it out line by line.. Need a sledgehammer from Starbucks :lol:
Try a jolt cola or an expresso coffee. Those'll wake ya! :shock:

Posted: 2003-03-13 10:29am
by theski
Next, the sledge is a standard coffee with 4 shots of expresso!! :D

Posted: 2003-03-13 10:32am
by Enforcer Talen
my question is, whats wrong with a one world nation?

Posted: 2003-03-13 10:58am
by Next of Kin
theski wrote:Next, the sledge is a standard coffee with 4 shots of expresso!! :D
I have to get me one of those! :wink:

Posted: 2003-03-13 11:48am
by DocHorror
my question is, whats wrong with a one world nation?
Lack of diversity, freedom, culture, etc...

and mainly that many people dont like the one nation that we would be under.

Posted: 2003-03-13 11:53am
by Colonel Olrik
Enforcer Talen wrote:my question is, whats wrong with a one world nation?
It's entirely different to construct a federation by gradually accepting willing members, who share the same ideals, like the E.U is doing, than bullying nations into submission, that your idea suggest. That's called an empire, and can only work by force and for a limited period of time.

If you want a bigger nation, invite Mexico to join the U.S, and share your wealth with those who need.

Posted: 2003-03-13 01:40pm
by Wedge
my question is, whats wrong with a one world nation?
And what was wrong with that idea 60 years ago?
Hitler wanted a one world nation too. So you say it's nothing wrong with that, ok. But you sure have problems with the methods he wanted to use to reach his objectives. Conquering other lands and "cleaning" us from the jews, blacks, and other "inferiors", it was just for the "wealth" of the empire. But now, you don't have any problems how Bush & Company wants to make a new world order. So i wonder what you had been back in 1939 in Germany (a convinced nazi?).

I totally agree with Colonel Olrik in this aspect.

Posted: 2003-03-13 01:57pm
by Enforcer Talen
DocHorror wrote:
my question is, whats wrong with a one world nation?
Lack of diversity, freedom, culture, etc...

and mainly that many people dont like the one nation that we would be under.
since when do borders keep diversity or culture going? they thrive on their own, and mix and match nicely, forming new cultures. freedom, of course, depends on the nation that is the world.

like the nation, or the current administraton?

Posted: 2003-03-13 01:59pm
by Enforcer Talen
Colonel Olrik wrote:
Enforcer Talen wrote:my question is, whats wrong with a one world nation?
It's entirely different to construct a federation by gradually accepting willing members, who share the same ideals, like the E.U is doing, than bullying nations into submission, that your idea suggest. That's called an empire, and can only work by force and for a limited period of time.

If you want a bigger nation, invite Mexico to join the U.S, and share your wealth with those who need.
my idea doesnt suggest bullying nations into submission - just removing repressive regimes and bring the people with the same ideals in.

and, I plan to.

Posted: 2003-03-13 02:03pm
by Enforcer Talen
Wedge wrote:
my question is, whats wrong with a one world nation?
And what was wrong with that idea 60 years ago?
Hitler wanted a one world nation too. So you say it's nothing wrong with that, ok. But you sure have problems with the methods he wanted to use to reach his objectives. Conquering other lands and "cleaning" us from the jews, blacks, and other "inferiors", it was just for the "wealth" of the empire. But now, you don't have any problems how Bush & Company wants to make a new world order. So i wonder what you had been back in 1939 in Germany (a convinced nazi?).

I totally agree with Colonel Olrik in this aspect.
a good number of people have wanted a one world nation. everyday you can see posters that want world peace, and can you honestly think of a way that brings about world peace without everyone considering themselves the same nation?

the trick, of course, is that the one world nation supports human rights. thats the central tenet of my argument - that those with the power to do so should make human rights world wide, as well as erasing the causes of war in the past - borders, poverty, racism and famine.

Posted: 2003-03-13 02:39pm
by Sebastin
theski wrote:Vympel, so a bunch of peace activists write an article.. I give it as much criedence as you would if the Rand Corp wrote an opposing peace. Seems the political and Ideological split on this BBs is wide and never the 2 shall meet but WTF it is good fun!! :twisted:
The Spiegel is by far the most respected news source in germany. They´re hardly "a bunch of peace activists".

Posted: 2003-03-13 02:58pm
by NecronLord
Enforcer Talen wrote:the trick, of course, is that the one world nation supports human rights.
Who would this be? I remind you the french human rights record is far superior to your own. America still has the death penalty. Start at home.

thats the central tenet of my argument - that those with the power to do so should make human rights world wide,
Who would this be? should the EU begin arming now to overtake the US as a superpower. First we'll need to invite Russia in, then say...

as well as erasing the causes of war in the past - borders,
You should deal with the state boarders before trying to imose your will on everyone else.

poverty,
Because no one in the USA is poor... :roll:

racism
How? Prehaps you could look to your divese list of presidents for advice?

and famine.
My hat comes of to you there, America is indeed the planets leader in the antifamine technique of overconsumption.


Yes it's from the bible, but please examine the log in your own eye first.

Posted: 2003-03-13 03:29pm
by Colonel Olrik
Enforcer Talen wrote:
a good number of people have wanted a one world nation. everyday you can see posters that want world peace, and can you honestly think of a way that brings about world peace without everyone considering themselves the same nation?.

I am an European and Portuguese. If you want to create a new federation, based on the E.U ideas, englobing both the U.S and the E.U in an equal partnership, I could live with that.

But that's not what you're implying. You want the U.S as the effective government of the world, with the rest of the countries submiting to Washington D.C. Please tell, why is that so different from the former British Empire? England was a democracy, and imposed her "benevolent" will upon a large part of the world. The system was relatively stable, it took two world wars to dismantle it.

I don't want to be an U.S colony, no matter how high you consider your motives to be. Sorry.
the trick, of course, is that the one world nation supports human rights. thats the central tenet of my argument - that those with the power to do so should make human rights world wide, as well as erasing the causes of war in the past - borders, poverty, racism and famine.
Strictly following that reasoning, you should submit to the E.U.

We don't have those infamous Km-long food lines I sometimes see in U.S news, our laws about racism are much more strict (the racists cannot shout " X ammendment") and our legislation about human rights is more advanced.

Posted: 2003-03-13 08:30pm
by Enforcer Talen
Colonel Olrik wrote:
Enforcer Talen wrote:
a good number of people have wanted a one world nation. everyday you can see posters that want world peace, and can you honestly think of a way that brings about world peace without everyone considering themselves the same nation?.

I am an European and Portuguese. If you want to create a new federation, based on the E.U ideas, englobing both the U.S and the E.U in an equal partnership, I could live with that.

But that's not what you're implying. You want the U.S as the effective government of the world, with the rest of the countries submiting to Washington D.C. Please tell, why is that so different from the former British Empire? England was a democracy, and imposed her "benevolent" will upon a large part of the world. The system was relatively stable, it took two world wars to dismantle it.

I don't want to be an U.S colony, no matter how high you consider your motives to be. Sorry.
the trick, of course, is that the one world nation supports human rights. thats the central tenet of my argument - that those with the power to do so should make human rights world wide, as well as erasing the causes of war in the past - borders, poverty, racism and famine.
Strictly following that reasoning, you should submit to the E.U.

We don't have those infamous Km-long food lines I sometimes see in U.S news, our laws about racism are much more strict (the racists cannot shout " X ammendment") and our legislation about human rights is more advanced.
I, personally, dont want the world to be a usa colony either. it's just begging for trouble. it would almost certainly start the armageddon I am trying to avoid. instead, I want to unite humanity, unite the species, with america as the tool. its the current lone superpower, so is the necessary. your right, europe does have a better standard in some places - which is why I want them and usa together. no colonies, no lack of representation - so that they can influence as you said.

Posted: 2003-03-13 08:48pm
by RogueIce
Enforcer Talen wrote:my question is, whats wrong with a one world nation?
Doesn't the Bible say so...? :roll:

Posted: 2003-03-13 08:49pm
by Enforcer Talen
like I read the bible anymore :roll:

Posted: 2003-03-13 08:51pm
by Joe
We don't have those infamous Km-long food lines I sometimes see in U.S news
We don't have food lines regularly. Food is incredibly abundant in America.

Granted we're in a recession now, so we have a few. But they aren't a normal occurence. And a KM long?

Posted: 2003-03-13 08:58pm
by Enforcer Talen
I was wondering about that, too. 18 yrs in america, never seen km long lines for anything this side of a sale.

Posted: 2003-03-14 01:19am
by Enlightenment
Enforcer Talen wrote:my idea doesnt suggest bullying nations into submission - just removing repressive regimes and bring the people with the same ideals in.
Who died and gave you the right to decide which states have a right to exist and which don't? This isn't the 19th century: you don't have an innate neo-white man's burden and get rid of any state that doesn't ask 'how high?' when you order them to 'jump.'
I, personally, dont want the world to be a usa colony either. it's just begging for trouble. it would almost certainly start the armageddon I am trying to avoid. instead, I want to unite humanity, unite the species, with america as the tool.
Alliances can only be made of the willing. Anything else is just imperialism dressed in propaganda and self-justification.

What you are describing is not a truely united species created willingly by humanity but rather an empire created by force of arms.