Calling on Congress to Stop a War
Let's hear it for the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). After more than five years of effort, incorporating technologically advanced, exhaustive inspections of Iran's declared nuclear facilities (and, to a lesser degree, some undeclared facilities as well), the fruit of its labor has been borne out in a National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) produced by the U.S. intelligence community that finds that Iran is not currently pursuing a nuclear weapons program. While the analysis behind the NIE conclusion reflects the independent judgment of the 16 agencies which comprise the U.S. intelligence community, there is no doubt that the most influential information behind the assessment was that of the IAEA inspections, which had probed Iran's nuclear program since November 2002. The IAEA had coordinated closely with the U.S. intelligence community in preparing for its inspections inside Iran, so much so that there was almost no stone left unturned and no major question left unanswered for U.S. analysts when it came to the nuclear facilities and activities of interest. The consensus-driven NIE puts to rest the notion that Iran represents any sort of imminent threat worthy of near-term pre-emptive military action.
Personally, the NIE (and its roots in the findings of the IAEA inspections) came as no surprise. In my 2006 book "Target Iran" I framed precisely the same argument using data virtually identical to that contained in the NIE. While I am tempted to utter the immortal words "I told you so," such self-congratulation would not only reek of hubris but divert attention away from the fact that the NIE isn't the final word on the framing and implementation of U.S.-Iran policy. It is but an empty document void of meaning unless life is breathed into its findings by an Executive rededicated to formulating policy founded in fact, not ideology, or a Congress awakened to its long-dormant status as a separate but equal branch of government.
There is, of course, considerable nuance contained in the NIE, enough to provide a safety net for those who had postulated a much more alarmist notion of Iran's nuclear ambition. Without citing specific evidence to substantiate its claims, the NIE declares that although the Iranian program has remained dormant since 2003, there is uncertainty about what the ultimate objectives of Iran are regarding its "assessed" nuclear program. Some, such as Stephen Hadley, the current national security adviser for the Bush administration, have jumped on this conclusion as clear evidence of the efficacy of President Bush's concerns over Iran's nuclear ambition, the need for continued resolve in the face of Iranian noncompliance with international demands concerning the suspension of uranium enrichment, and the endorsement of the "diplomacy first" posture publicly embraced by the Bush foreign policy team.
This sort of "let the intelligence estimate justify the current policy" approach is extremely disconcerting, not only because of the obvious cart-before-the-horse aspect, but perhaps, more important, because of past patterns of behavior by the Bush administration. As in its approach to Iraq in 2002, the White House has embraced an unspoken policy direction regarding Iran which seeks "regional transformation" in the Middle East, including the targeting of select regimes (such as Iran's theocracy) that are deemed to be incompatible with the United States' (read George W. Bush and Dick Cheney's) vision of how the Middle East should operate politically. This policy was in place prior to the publication of the NIE and remains in place today. The president himself has made it clear that, far from discrediting his policy stance vis-à-vis Iran, the new NIE reinforces his belief that Iran was a threat in the past and continues to pose a threat for the future in the form of an undeclared nuclear weapons program which, even in its current "dormant" state, could be restarted in short order by taking advantage of the uranium enrichment program the Bush administration has said must be halted, something Iran has steadfastly refused to do.
Virtually unreferenced in all of the media buzz following the release of the NIE on Iran is the response of America's No. 1 ally in the Middle East: Israel. Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak has dismissed the American NIE as irrelevant. The Israeli position has always been to oppose the development of any technology by Iran which provides material support to a nuclear weapons program, whether one formally exists or is currently dormant. The demonstrated capability of Iran to enrich uranium has crossed a red line previously declared by Israel to mark what is acceptable and unacceptable to its national security interests.
The recent Israeli airstrike against Syria only further clouds the issue. While it is increasingly clear that the target struck was neither a nuclear reactor under construction (despite the alarmist conclusions arrived at by David Albright and others) nor a plutonium extraction plant (an absurdity postulated without any factual basis by some Israeli nuclear "experts"), perception has a way of becoming its own reality. The ongoing Israeli paranoia about a nexus of nuclear proliferation among North Korea, Iran and Syria, void of any hard intelligence to back it up and yet hyped to the point that an abandoned military warehouse in the middle of the Syrian desert could be pre-emptively bombed, serves as a warning to any who believe that the newly published NIE will, by itself, inject a measure of sanity and objective thinking into a process that has created an ideologically driven self-fulfilling prophesy that no amount of fact and reasoning can make go away.
More telling would be if House Speaker Nancy Pelosi reversed her earlier position that Congress could not restrict the president when it came to the potential of military force against Iran out of concern for the national security interests of Israel. The fact that she hasn't, and won't, speaks volumes about the degree to which a dangerously schizophrenic Israel continues to influence and drive the foreign and national security policy of the Bush administration.
The fact is, on its own the new NIE cannot stop the Bush administration's desire to bring the Iran issue to a head by spring 2008. The framing of the "crisis," which began with fears over the Iranian nuclear program, shifted months ago. The focus of attention is now on Iran's status as a "state sponsor of terror," a charge the administration has made over and over again, whether in the form of the president's 2007 State of the Union speech or in the March 2006 National Security Strategy of the United States. Recent legislation passed by the Senate has only added fuel to the fire by naming the Iranian Revolutionary Guard command as a terrorist organization.
There is a school of thought that holds to the notion that because a military strike against Iran makes no sense, it will not happen. This, of course, is not only wishful thinking, it is also irresponsible. By continuing to focus on the Iran issue in terms of so-called threat models and ignoring the underlying reality of an ideologically driven policy objective of regime change in Tehran, those who could prevent a war between the United States and Iran are simply facilitating its inevitability. I've seen this pattern of behavior before, in the buildup to the invasion of Iraq. While the world debated the issue of weapons of mass destruction, left unmentioned was the decades-long policy of regime change in Baghdad, instituted during the administration of Bill Clinton and inherited by George W. Bush. The events of Sept. 11, 2001, put regime change on the fast track, and the end result is our current occupation. The WMD issue was simply a facilitator for conflict; war with Iraq for the purpose of removing Saddam Hussein was unavoidable so long as the ideological foundation of American policy remained unchanged. The same can be said of the situation facing the United States and Iran today. The nuclear and terror issues are simply vehicles for implementing a policy of regime change. Take away the nuclear issue and the policy remains. A new facilitator, such as terrorism, is then employed.
In short, the only way to prevent the full implementation of the Bush administration policy of regime change in Tehran is for Congress to directly challenge this policy. If there was ever a moment of redemption for the Democrats in Congress, this is it. Presidential contender Joe Biden, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, has said that if the president were to bomb Iran without congressional consent, then he would push for impeachment. But this reactive posture ignores the fact that we would, regardless of Biden's eventual maneuvering, be at war with Iran as a result of such a strike. Congress, by continuing to support existing war powers resolutions passed in 2001 and 2002, and through its ongoing support of the basic premise underwriting the administration's policy toward Iran (i.e., the Senate resolution labeling the Iranian Revolutionary Guard command as a terror organization), has tied its hands in terms of constitutionally challenging the president's contention that he has all the authority required to initiate an attack against Iran.
Rather than wait for disaster to strike, it would behoove Sen. Biden and others to use every parliamentary procedure available to subject the Bush Iran policy to the most critical scrutiny possible in order to deconstruct the unitary executive utopia the president (and vice president) currently resides in. Specific provisions that delink Iran from existing war powers authority, funding restrictions for any military action against Iran, and any measure that reinforces the notion that the president must seek the consent of Congress before military action against Iran would not only send a clear signal to the president about the limitations of his power but also establish clear legal foundation that could be applied, via the constitutional remedy of impeachment, should the president proceed in complete disregard of the will of Congress. But the will of Congress must be expressed, not implied, and soon.
The time for action is now. Joe Biden would be doing America, and the world, a huge favor if he would remove his candidate's hat and resume the role which he has been empowered by his constituents to serve: overseer of American foreign policy. Hearings must be held, and time is not on our side. If the newly released NIE on Iran is to have any meaning, then let it be that it triggered a reawakening of the Congress of the United States to assert its authority and responsibility in a time of great need.
Scott Ritter was a Marine Corps intelligence officer from 1984 to 1991 and a United Nations weapons inspector in Iraq from 1991 to 1998. He is the author of numerous books, including "Iraq Confidential" (Nation Books, 2005) , "Target Iran" (Nation Books, 2006) and his latest, "Waging Peace: The Art of War for the Antiwar Movement" (Nation Books, April 2007).
© 2007 TruthDig.com
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30 Comments so far
Show AllThose rascals of the NIE reports have us chasing or tails...they made us believe Saddam had weapons we were looking for because we sold them to him and then "voila"...they were gone.
My suggestion for Dems in congress is to borrow a tactic from Ghandi- passive resistance. Do not attend legislative sessions. If they do attend, abstain from voting. Since they can only pass bills that enable Bush's wars/occupation, and are unable to pass bills to fund children's healthcare, perhaps it is better to avoid doing harm rather than futiley oppose Bush.If passive resistance sounds too harsh to Dem sensibilities they could call it passive non-cooperation.
Please read sign and circulate: http://www.PetitionOnline.com/2021456/petition.html
GG PEARL — I agree with your "… feeling that what we have stored in our minds is going to, and already has served a greater purpose",
Your shared understanding and coaching to ABBY B WOOD was insightful for me as well, and I see a strong connection to another article, that last week I saw you responded to, entitled: "Readers Find Common Ground in Shared Despair".
Did you go back later and happen to see WALT's comment in that thread: "It's going to take an entierly new kind of revolution – one that doesn't self-identify as a revolution, one that works more like a moral awakening"?
The gradual awakening and moral outrage are building, and everyone's keen intention, and attention to knowing the truth is beneficial.
Namaste … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … Mahatma Gandhi … … … … … … … … … …
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world »
« There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need but not for man's greed »
I would say that if it takes $100B per year for all the troops and contractors, the $190B+ that W wants this coming year is out of the question. It was said the extra is for rebuilding Iraq, which means billions of dollars for the administration's friends in the contracting business. The Iraq war was suppose to be paid for from Iraqi oil revenues. It is time that the rebuilding truly be paid by those oil revenues and that they employ Iraqis to do it.
I've called my house rep, a "middle of the road" Dem, to express my opposition to any funding of the war. My next call will be to say that he won't get my vote if he approves such funding again. I simply won't vote for any lesser of two evils, even if there is no third-party or independent alternative.
abbybwood; Your first post on this article says it all! The old saying "birds of a feather flock together" is just as true with human beings. Too many folks still think the Democrats are coming to the rescue, so to speak. Isn't it obvious by now it ain't' gonna happen. All but three Democrats voted for war-monger Jane Harman's bill several weeks ago, it should be clear to the American people what we are up against. What is the purpose for denial? I just don't understand.
For those of you seeking more information in well-written articles besides our wonderful Common Dreams, check out these sites. Some of you already do. I haven't figured how to highlight in blue, links to other sites but just yahoo or google these in and you'll see them.
INFORMATION CLEARING HOUSE... CAROLYN BAKER.NET... GLOBAL RESEARCH.CA...
Lower case is enough. Please check them out for yourselves, and read some of the articles from each one.
ggpearl; Ignorance is not blissful by any means. The reason most of us spend an extraordinary amount of time on CD and other websites is because of the self-imposed ignorance of the majority of our fellow citizens.
COMarc and citizen1; Both of you are correct.
ABBYBWOOD
"I'm almost jealous in a way when I go out to buy groceries or something. I see people who appear completely oblivious to the truth. They appear happy and carefree."
"We are almost like the conscience of our country and the planet I think."
Indeed sweetheart. My strange mission to get as much info as I could started in 1996. I had my own small business and all of a sudden NEEDED to go to college at the age of 28...it was the most strange compulsion I have ever had.
I could not decide what to major in, so I chose Anthropology, the study of humans.
I absorbed everything I could at a rate that scared me. And then 9/11.
I once heard someone say that 9/11 ripped a hole in the so called fabric of reality for those who could stomach standing on the edge of the abyss to "see" all of human history.
I happen to agree with this. And I also agree that there are many of us here, in different stages of awakening, who feel compelled to search and learn and disseminate all of the info we learned and to bring that info to our peace table. To form and construct the bigger pic.
The point of my rambling is to say I understand your comments. I share your walk in life and understand your feeling of isolation from others who seem to have no clue.
Ignorance seems blissful, and our knowledge seems to bring us sorrow. But, I have a feeling that what we have stored in our minds is going to, and already has served a greater purpose.
I do not mean to sound patronizing or holier than thou, just an attempt to let you know that I feel the same way.
Hugs
And I repeat, the Dems are neither spineless nor gutless. On the contrary, it takes lots of guts to tell the very people who have given the Dems the Congress in 2006 with the clear demand that Bush be held accountable and that the war be stopped, that "impeachment is off the table", and to continue funding the war.
But please use your brains folks. The Dems don't serve us. They serve ... (see my last post above).
No, the Dems are very principled in supporting their constituents (which we are not). Think about it...
I highly respect Scott Ritter. His pieces before the deceptive Iraq war were right on target.
The problem is, the Congress is not our solution. Just like in case of Iraq the Congress is a complicit. Forget the conventional wisdom. The Dems are equally complicit. The Dems serve the same masters: the big corporations, the military-industrial complex and the Israeli lobby.
in spite of the Dems' complicity in Iraq war, in spite of "impeachment is off the table policy" and in spite of blatant inactions since 2006 elections, my countrymen can not see thorough the fog of propaganda.
The Dems are not the opposition party, they are part of the problem (complicit)
We do not have a functioning democracy (only 40% of citizens vote, the President has 25% approval rating and the Congress has 12% approval rating,...). Get over the conventional wisdom, think for yourself....
Nice article. The problem is it calls on Democrats to oppose a war.
And the problem isn't just that the Dems are spineless or cowards. The problem is that they have been supporters and backers of the policy from the beginning. So of course they aren't very effective at opposing it.
If you want a glimpse of how the Dems really feel, try this article (Washington Post found via antiwar.com). The headline is "Hill briefed on waterboarding in 2002". But the headline could just as well have been "Pelosi Hearts Torture."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/12/08/AR2007120801664_pf.html
The key bit to understand just what you are dealing with in the Democrats is this:
"...on that day, no objections were raised. Instead, at least two lawmakers in the room asked the CIA to push harder, two U.S. officials said.
'The briefer was specifically asked if the methods were tough enough,' said a U.S. official who witnessed the exchange."
The Democrats give Bush every cent demanded and approve every war and every torture of a prisoner because they support this policy. The parts that's a 'show' or 'political theater' is the bs they spin out for us where they try to pretend they are an opposition.
The Dems will give Bush and The Dick every cent demanded. Usually they tack on a few cents more, just to show their loyalty. But they don't 'cave' to do this because they've never really opposed the idea in the first place.
The way to end this war is to STOP VOTING DEMOCRAT!
Good column by Scott. Trouble with it is he relied on
facts and the spoken and written word. That's not enough
to get democrats to do something constructive as opposed
to their cowering like beaten dogs before Liar Bush and
The Dick's onslaughts.
Those two fraudulent fakers are demanding a 190 billion
dollar supplement to their trillion dollar mission in
Iraq. The Dems are making a show of additions and subtractions to and from the bill, but I'm betting they
cave and give Bush and The Dick every cent demanded.
Any takers? I mean besides Georgie and The Dick.
Olmert is in bed with Bush; now if we can just get Ahmadinejad in there.
I highly respect Mr Scott Ritter, but he appears to have his own misconception: he is assuming that Congress, particularly the Democrats, are horses of different colors, that they are some sort of moral bunch different from the warmongering cabal that is now running the US foreign policy.
As soon as Congress found out from the NIE report that Bush would be losing his nuclear excuse for starting a war with Iran, it readily gave him another excuse by passing a resolution declaring the Iranian Revolutionary Guards a terrorist organization, knowing full well that the war powers resolutions passed in 2001 and 2002, gives Bush the authority and the excuse to wage war against Iran. This is called enabling. To expect a congress that is doing its best to enable warmongers is simply naïve. They're in it up to their necks ALL TOGETHER.
Dear Rebel Farmer and willybill:
Ha!! How long do I spend on the Internet a day? Far too much I'm sure. But in spite of it I manage to get my daily chores done, clean the house (half-assed), walk the dog (weather permitting) etc.
And as to your question about how do I survive all the information...
It's very difficult. Obviously it is depressing.
The vast majority of people on this website (and Salon etc.) want to know the truth about what is really going on. We are almost like the conscience of our country and the planet I think. We learn many hard facts and try to disseminate the information to our friends and neighbors (and here on-line). As for me, I get very frustrated with people in my "community".
I'm almost jealous in a way when I go out to buy groceries or something. I see people who appear completely oblivious to the truth. They're Christmas shopping, "Happy Motoring", going to school plays with their kids, going home and cooking dinner and hanging with the family in front of the TV. Maybe watching "the game" (tonight my sons are in L.A. watching some "boxing match"!), having a beer and are not paying much attention to "current events" let alone the really critical information that is out there to be learned. They appear happy and carefree.
Everyone on these pages, I'm sure, would love to wake up tomorrow and have this world be the way it "should" be.
You know. Justice, freedom, equality, environmental sanity, no wars, no hunger, every child wanted and loved, objective and honest educational systems and on and on. But, alas. These things allude us and I find myself asking far more questions every day than getting the answers that satisfy my curiosities.
As to the Peak Oil issue...I just happened to listen to an interview with James Howard Kunstler. Check out his website. He has a new book coming out in the spring of 2008 that I think will really be the mental equivilent of a swift kick in the ass for the thinking American public. Plus he has some great fiction work as well!
I really like the posts on Commondreams and Salon. Sometimes there are some interesting ones over at InformationClearinghouse too.
Thanks for the acknowledgments. I'll try to keep sharing and playing nice in the sandbox.
"Congress: Bingo with billions"
Red Skelton
"A republican stands up in congress and says 'I GOT A REALLY BAD IDEA!!' and the democrat stands up after him and says 'AND I CAN MAKE IT SHITTIER!!'"
Lewis Black
"You can't use tact with a Congressman! A Congressman is a hog! You must take a stick and hit him on the snout!"
Henry Brooks Adams
"It's a sad day when you have members of Congress who are literally criminals go undisciplined by their colleagues. No wonder people look at Washington and know this city is broken."
Senator John Kerry
Touche', Abbybwood...........
Abbybwood: You always amaze me! How long do youn spend on the internet a day? I always love you links. The whole mess with Peak Oil that you linked me to has had me in a daze for a week. HELP! How do you survive all this info?
To willybill:
Lots of things have been accomplished in hearings since the Democrats took power!
Eric Prince of Blackwater, Inc. testified about the murders his mercenaries committed in Iraq and he got a pass from the Democrats. Mukasey testified that he wasn't sure waterboarding was torture and he got a pass from the Democrats. And Jane Harman recently held hearings with several witnesses from The Wiesenthal Center and The Rand Corporation in support of her "Homegrown Terrorism Act" that labels 9/11 Truth Movement supporters as a threat to national security!
Come on! I'd say the Democrats have accomplished plenty with their little hearings.
Of course, not for the American people or the planet.
If only you were right willybill. If only they had gone "nowhere".
For Mr. Ritter, I have great respect and admiration, but will someone, anyone tell me when any of these Congressional hearings have accomplished a thing since the Dems "took power"?? They just seem to be dog and pony shows that go nowhere. No one even any longer pays any attention to the subpoenas.
The top U.S. military leadership will be in Israel this weekend getting Israel's "analysis" of what Iran is REALLY doing vis-a-vis it's nuclear weapons program.
Scott has ordinarily been right on the money with his analysis, except for this time.
Israel is driving this march (excerpt from the Jerusulem Post), and naturally the AIPAC financed Congress will "go along to get along" with the hard line Zionists:
"Admiral Michael Mullen will land in Israel Sunday morning for a 24-hour visit that will include a one-on-one meeting with IDF Chief of General Staff Lt.-Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi, as well as with Defense Minister Ehud Barak.
According to a Time magazine article published Wednesday, Mullen is a member of the Pentagon's "anti-war [with Iran] group" that includes Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Admiral William Fallon, current commander of the US Central Command.
In a recent press briefing in Washington, however, Mullen took a hard-line approach, refusing to rule out the possibility that military force will be used to stop Iran's race towards nuclear power."
Scott needs to recall the article he had here at Commondreams several months ago where he said, "Perhaps we should just raise the Israeli flag here and call it a day."
Those numbskulls in Congress need to get in gear and put an absolute stop to any chance BushCheney start an attack on Iran. Like Scott said, fat lot of good Biden would do after Bush starts something over there. Too late again!!
NBC news had a report about the NIE findings a few days ago. Before this they were parroting the Bush administration's lie that Iran was a threat. The reporter stated that the NIE findings were the first that NBC news had seen this information. Why wasn't the MSM looking at the information Scott Ritter was able to dig up instead of following word for word what the Bush administration was saying ? Why don't so-called journalists actually do their jobs? I am sure there are still people in this country who believe Iran still has nukes just like people believe Saddam Hussein conducted 9/11 because of the MSM's inability to get the story straight.
I agree with Saila. Congress (including the Democrats) are complicit in all of this illegal activity. I think the only realistic way (and I would hate for it to happen) to really end this war is to invoke the draft. The problem is Bush Co. would not do it for fear of the mass demonstrations that would ensue.
This NIE report has probably not even slowed down the handful of brain cells still firing in the rancid, 13 year old mind of George Wanker Bush . . . the brain cells that say: "Iraq was a fuck-up. It was supposed to make me a Great President. I know; I'll attack Iran and that will make me a Great President." And as long as the Democruds remain in their whipped dog mode nothing will stop the criminal elite in WARshington from this further and supreme act of moral and political stupidity.
Great column, Scott. Of course, your "pay grade" is too low to make suggestions to Sen. Biden (lol). I agree that Congress could block this war, and that Dubya's gang will use any pretext. My question is, who do the Bush Gang think they need to convince? Under the Non-Proliferation Treaty, Iran has the right to enrich uranium. The Bush Gang basically maintain that enrichment, per se, equals a "program," and insist that an Iranian "program" means war. Would even Germany, the UK, and France today support such a "preventive" war? The Bush Gang seems like they're betting that once they start, the media, public opinion, and the European allies will fall into line. Activists need to force Congress to stop the Bush Gang.
It is but an empty document void of meaning unless life is breathed into its findings by an Executive rededicated to formulating policy founded in fact, not ideology, or a Congress awakened to its long-dormant status as a separate but equal branch of government.
In your dreams!
Only impeachment is "off the table", not more US provocations and catastrophes in the Middle East. And that includes 'black ops' activities by the CIA and other agents of the imperium. Fear not. This is just a minor glitch. The warmongers will have their way in the end. They always do.
Hey Scott,
Great interview the other day on Truthdig! I too am not looking forward to 2008, 09, 10, but 2020.
First, how 'bout we stop the effin' wordmince. "Nice" ain't working; Miss Manner's time will come again, if we're lucky. But now it's Tom Paineinan belly-fire that will 'spill their water' and carry the True Patriot's Day.
From Iraq to Iran: this IS the WEALTHIEST WAR CABINET ON THE MOST CHICKENHAWKED WARPATH IN AMERICAN HISTORY.
I.e., follow the bloodmoney--follow the vicious circle of pre-emptive attacks and plans for same--the hedge-funded, blind 'trusted' "unrecu$ed-for-life" "Fortune$ O' War" Room in the Chainy-Bush Family Estate. Their "DUE"? Really? those whose grotesquely-sustained "inattention" to "detail" forced "neighborhood-privatized" bake sales for "troop protection", finally culminating in the most criminally-negligent term in the vernacular of American combat: "HILLBILLY ARMOR".
Can anyone imagine a President Gore or Kerry walking politically unscathed after that profoundly inour-national-FACE moral failure?
I$ it 'Demonic Mojo'? The Deception of even the "Very Elect"?
WHY is Hou$e Bushelzebub given so many "passes", (they should have been impeached ten scandals ago!) how are they still thought of as even remotely "Troop Supportive", this GOPetered Principle, God-&-Country-Club (Devil-in-the-DEtail$ BIGtime) Party of "Ba$e Elites".
There's a bluntly simple way to 'call' their bluff & "update", given the 'robust complexity' of the global investment landscape, the "Oath of Office" with a now-and-ever-more-pertinent "Oath" of MARTIAL Office. Think of it as an Idea Whose Time has Come--a plan for "Portfolio Hygiene" for these overindulged, bunker-minded Grea$e Monkeys of the War Machine.
Moral arguments against asking it? --NONE.
Watchin' 'em $quirm? ---PRICEless...
SUNDAY EDITORIAL
Nov. 25 2007
Radical Ethics: No bucks from war
P-I EDITORIAL BOARD
"...this left-wing, left-coast idea actually reaches into the heartland and history of the country..."
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/11/25/5422/
WHAT WE'RE UP AGAINST:
http://www.sfbg.com/blogs/politics/2007/08/political_art_of_the_week.html
What is Scott Ritter's objective? He refers to the neocons as "those who had postulated a much more alarmist notion of Iran's nuclear ambition", laying on a thick coat of lacquer to make the evil demons appear shiny and legitimate. What the neocons postulate doesn't really matter because their wicked agenda is very predictable. What really matters is that we build the alter-institutions, the shadow government, to take control when this rotten to the core government finally collapses. Mr. Ritter then describes "an unspoken White House policy of removing Middle Eastern regimes incompatible with the WH vision of how the Middle East should operate politically". This is several thick coats of lacquer on "Conquer the Middle East". Why doesn't Mr. Ritter just say it? What's up with TruthDig? Is TruthDig the new Weekly Standard?