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Dissenting Views Made Fallon's Fall Inevitable
WASHINGTON - Admiral William Fallon's request to quit his position as head of the U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) and to retire from the military was apparently the result of a George W. Bush administration decision to pressure him to resign.
Announcing the resignation, Defence Secretary Robert M. Gates said he believed it was "the right thing to do", thus indicating the administration wanted it.
On Monday, Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell, asked whether Gates still had full confidence in Fallon, would only say that Fallon "still enjoys a working -- a good working relationship with the secretary of defence", and then added, "Admiral Fallon serves at the pleasure of the president."
The resignation came a few days after the publication of an Esquire magazine article profiling Fallon in which he was described as being "in hot water" with the White House and justified public comments departing from the Bush administration's policy toward Iran. The publicity that followed the article accelerated the pressure on Fallon to resign.
But Fallon almost certainly knew that he would be fired when he agreed to cooperate with the Esquire magazine profile in late 2006.
On Tuesday, Fallon issued a statement saying, "Recent press reports suggesting a disconnect between my views and the president's policy objectives have become a distraction at a critical time and hamper efforts in the Centcom region."
The resignation brings to an end a year, during which time Fallon clashed with the White House over policy toward Iran and with Gen. David Petraeus and the White House over whether Iraq should continue to be given priority over Afghanistan and Pakistan in U.S. policy.
Fallon's greatest concern appears to have been preventing war with Iran. He was one a group of senior military officers, apparently including most of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who were alarmed in late 2006 and early 2007 by indications that Bush and Vice-President Dick Cheney were contemplating a possible attack on Iran.
Gates chose Fallon to replace Gen. John P. Abizaid as CENTCOM chief shortly after a Dec. 13, 2006 meeting between Bush and the Joint Chiefs at which Bush reportedly asked their views on a possible strike against Iran.
Col. W. Patrick Lang, a former intelligence officer on the Middle East for the Defence Intelligence Agency, told the Washington Post last week that Fallon had said privately at the time of his confirmation that an attack on Iran "isn't going to happen on my watch", When asked how he could avoid such a conflict, Fallon reportedly responded, "I have options, you know." Lang said he interpreted that comment as implying Fallon would step down rather than follow orders to carry out such an attack.
As IPS reported last May, Fallon was also quoted as saying privately at that time, "There are several of us trying to put the crazies back in the box". That was an apparent reference to the opposition by the Joint Chiefs of Staff to an aggressive war against Iran.
Even before assuming his new post at CENTCOM, Fallon expressed strong opposition in mid-February to a proposal for sending a third U.S. aircraft carrier to the Persian Gulf, to overlap with two other carriers, according to knowledgeable sources. The addition of a third carrier was to part of a broader strategy then being discussed at the Pentagon to intimidate Iran by making a series of military moves suggesting preparations for a military strike.
The plan for a third carrier task force in the Gulf was dropped after Fallon made his views known.
Fallon reportedly made his opposition to a strike against Iran known to the White House early on in his tenure, and his role as CENTCOM commander would have made it very difficult for the Bush administration to carry out a strike against Iran, because he controlled all ground, air and naval military access to the region.
But Fallon's role in regional diplomacy proved to be an even greater source of friction with the White House than his position on military policy toward Iran. Personal relations with military and political leaders in the Middle East had already become nearly as important as military planning under Fallon's predecessors at CENTCOM.
Fallon clearly relished his diplomatic role and did not hesitate to express views on diplomacy that were at odds with those of the administration. Last summer, as Dick Cheney was maneuvering within the administration to shift U.S. policy toward an attack on bases in Iran allegedly connected to anti-U.S. Shiite forces in Iraq, Fallon declared in an interview, "We have to figure out a way to come to an arrangement" with Iran.
When Sunni Arab regimes in the Middle East became alarmed about the possibility of a U.S. war with Iran, Fallon made statements on three occasions in September and November ruling out a U.S. attack on Iran. Those statements contradicted the Bush administration's policy of keeping the military option "on the table" and soured relations with the White House.
Fallon also antagonised administration officials by pushing for a faster exit from Iraq than the White House and Gen. Petraeus wanted. Fallon had a highly-publicised personal and policy clash with Petraeus, for whom he reportedly expressed a visceral dislike. Sources familiar with reports of his meetings with Petraeus in Baghdad last March told IPS last spring that he called him an "ass-kissing little chickens**t" in their first meeting.
Fallon later denied that he had used such language, suggesting to Esquire that the sources of the report were probably army officers who were indulging in inter-service rivalry with the navy. In fact, however, the sources of the report were supporters of Fallon.
Fallon's quarrel with Petraeus was also related to the latter's insistence on keeping U.S. troops in Iraq, even while the NATO position in Afghanistan was growing more tenuous. Fallon was strongly committed to a strategy that gave priority to Afghanistan and Pakistan as the central security challenges to the United States in the Middle East and Asia.
Fallon made his distaste for a long war in Iraq very clear from the beginning. He ordered subordinates to stop using the term "long war", which had been favoured by the Bush administration. He was reported to be concerned that the concept would alienate people across the Middle East by suggesting a U.S. intention to maintain troops indefinitely in Muslim countries.
Fallon's policy positions made him unpopular among neoconservative supporters of the administration. One neoconservative pundit, military specialist Max Boot, criticised Fallon last November for his public comment ruling out a strike against Iran and then suggested in January that Petraeus should replace the "unimpressive" Fallon at CENTCOM.
Fallon was playing a complex political game at CENTCOM by crossing the White House on the two most politically sensitive issues in Middle East policy. As a veteran bureaucratic infighter, he knew that he was politically vulnerable. Nevertheless, he chose late last year not to lower his profile but to raise it by cooperating fully with the Esquire article.
IPS has learned that Fallon agreed to sit for celebrity photographer Peter Yang at CENTCOM headquarters in Tampa Dec. 26 for the Esquire spread, despite the near-certainty that it exacerbate his relations with White House. That may have been a signal that he already knew that he would not be able to continue to play the game much longer and was ready to bring his stormy tenure at CENTCOM to an end.
© 2008 Inter Press Service
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Show AllThe White House's propaganda campaign laying the groundwork for military action against Iran now dates back over six years—to Bush's 2002 State of the Union address in which he designated Iran as a founding member of the "axis of evil." Since then, this drumbeat has waxed and waned as other concerns and obstacles—including Admiral Fallon's leadership—have often commanded center stage. Now, with the Bush administration well into its final year in office and on the heels of Fallon's resignation, a renewed push and a shorter fuse should not surprise us. My 3-minute YouTube video entitled "Forewarned Is Forearmed: Bush On Iran" is available HERE. It offers a brief chronicle of the president's public warmongering and demonization of Iran.
We may have Adm. Fallon to thank for not being at war with Iran as we speak. One can only hope that there are others in similar positions with the courage and vision to step forward at critical junctures to avert the catastrophe's that this administration seems to want to inflict on the world.
It's hard to come up with words anymore to describe the Bush administration. Bush lies about everything, but just for the hell of it, wasn't it Bush who said that he would follow the advice of his generals and colonels and other high ranking military officials on which actions to take militarily?
Another good person resigns, another sane mind is gone, another person who is in touch with reality, is gone from a position of power and importance.
As we all know, his replacement will be some fool who will support an attack on Iran, who might help create the conditions for martial law to be declared in the USA before the election.
As I said in my other post, the only thing I'm clinging to is hope that the rest of the world will save the USA from ourselves.
Another instance of, "If you're not with us, you're against us." The arrogance and ineptitude of this administration becomes more glaring everyday. Afraid to admit a mistake, accept a loss, or be challenged in any way, they change to rules, dissemble the truth, propanandise, initiate personal smear campaigns, and go about as absolute monarchs.
Congress has to be held at least partially accountable for this reign of terror and intimidation. They have acted with complicity, cowardice, and /or ineffectiveness. A near clean sweep this in November is appropriate.
With Obama likely to take the Democratic nomination, Bush and Cheney are fearful that they could be investigated, tried, and locked up after they leave office. Hillary, along with Bill, have obviously fomented good relations with the Bushes and the hard right Republicans and assured them that a Hillary administration would never prosecute any member of G. W. Bush's administration.
However, the Bush/Cheney criminal gang has no assurances from Obama, and so they are desperate to ensure that McCain wins in the Fall. And they feel a war with Iran just might do it.
Hybridoma:
Yes, those were the words and the implication of Bush's intention when asked about removal dates from Iraq and he planned, he said, to follow the wishes of his military experts.
We are the collective attitude of Charlie Brown when he always believes in what the his playmate promises.
hybridoma,
why would the rest of the world want to save us from ourselves after all the pain and destruction this country has inflicted over the last 40 years?
Col. W. Patrick Lang, a former intelligence officer on the ME for the DIA...interpreted ... Fallon would step down rather than follow orders to carry out such an attack.
Does that mean Fallon has already received orders to prepare for such an attack?
Finally that war-shirker Fallon is gone, a guy who Bush's menders saw as shamefully disloyal to the grand plans to destroy the world even more and profit from that war. On to "Bomb, bomb, bomb - bomb-bomb Iran". As McCain wants to and now nearly is in place to.
The internal upheaval near the top of the military chain of command accompanying Admiral Fallon's departure is destined to take place when active duty military officers commanding troops in an overseas combat zone are openly invited by their civilian Commander-in-Chief to enter the domestic partisan fray. BushCheney and Rove have shamelessly used Generals Petraeus, Mixon, Miller and other top brass to run a public relations campaign on behalf of the White House's disasterous war/occupation policies in the Middle East.
If the Esquire article and other background reports are accurate, when the admiral (behind closed doors) once called the general an "ass kissing little chickenshit", he was disparaging Petraeus's political courage, not the general's courage in warfare.
The "crazies" who had to be "put back in the box" were Bush, Cheney, and the neo-con ideologues. The propaganda hype surrounding the surge in the American news media (with Petraeus as its poster boy) clearly enables the crazies, rather than restraining further adventurism towards Iran.
So score one for the crazies, one less for the historic principle of separating active duty military service from participation in partisan politics. Ominously, Fallon's ouster has been predicted by doomsayers elsewhere as a sure sign that a US bombing attack upon Iran will be a big piece of Little George's final act before he finally hands over the keys to the Oval Office on his way out of town.
DefSec Gates declares any such premeditated attack plan towards Tehran is ridiculous. Don't take that assurance to the bank.
Events can change fast, and take on a dynamic all their own, if some SNAFU or skullduggery produced significant American casualties anywhere in the Persian Gulf region prior to the 2008 election, an incident that could plausibly be attributed to Iran.
Remember the Maine.
Bill from Saginaw
Admiral Fallon's name can be added along with General Shinseki to the list of military men who actually had the temerity to speak truth to power. It would appear that Dubya, Cheney, & Co. will be doing their insanity right until the very moment they leave office. Thus, Pelosi's ill-advised promise of "impeachment being off the table" looks more craven and foolish with each new outrage that comes to light. Future generations will look upon this time and shrug their shoulders in the same we do to our predecessors whom allowed slavery and segregation to exist.
How about an Obama / Fallon ticket ?
Admiral Fallon demonstrated thoughtful and courageous behaviors in the face of certain damage to his long career. He is the missing link in America today, the willingness to stand up to madness and abuse for the betterment of all. The effect of his personal sacrifice is not rendered silent by his forced resignation, but magnified dramatically as proof that one good and courageous man does matter. Admiral Fallon's defiance in the face of aggressive ignorance will be celebrated and he will stand tall among the good men of history. Thank you Admiral Fallon.
If we lived in a democratic society that truly stood for the consitutional precepts and spirit once claimed -- Bush and all his little friends would be prosecuted for high crimes and intentional efforts to overthrow the "real" government of the United States of America. These vile people are traitors to America.
NateW -
Don't you think Pelosi's decision to take impeachment "off the table" might have been part of a high level trade off?
In exchange for the Dems' awful decision to forget about impeachment as the proper Constitutional remedy for high crimes and misdemeanors, Rove and the GOP agreed not to contest all the close 2006 election contests that could have been tied up in recounts for months, letting the Democrats assume razor thin, nominal control of the Senate along with the House. Such a deal might explain the mysterious unwillingness of Rep. John Conyers - a vigorous proponent of impeachment proceedings and other aggressive House investigations of White House crimes prior to the 2006 election - to budge on the issue of impeachment after the Democrats won.
Just speculating, mind you.....
Bill from Saginaw
I went into a funk after I heard of Fallon's resignation. I still believe that the only reason that Darth/Schrub haven't bombed Iran so far is because of Fallon. I also believe that his decision to "retire" is because he knew that at some point he would be forced to follow the orders of the "commander-in-chief" to carry out a bombing order.
There will be NO military coup. There is no longer any reason to believe that the nightmare scenerio of the bombing of Iran can be stopped. And there is no reason to believe that Darth/Schrub are leaving office.
So, buckle up and keep your head down. The perfect storm of collapse is headed our way. I had really hoped that a nuclear holocost would not be part of this mess, but I think it is now inevitable. China, Russia, Pakistan, and India are not going to just sit on the sidelines on this one.
Have a nice day.
Oh, I almost forgot....There is one piece of good news:
The good people of Petrero, CA have stopped the building of a Blackwater base there.
Isn't it illegal by international law to make threats of aggression and/or military intervention/strikes against other countries who have not threatened to use, or have used force against any other country? Wouldn't it be something to hear a host of other countries remind the U.S. publicly of that -- and then have the media report it? Too bad it won't happen -- they're either for U.S. agression, or they're a bunch of chicken-s**ts.
Some say Bush is blackmaiiling dem leaders by their wireless eavesdropping. Not sure I buy that.
But if these military leaders wanted to stop an Iran attack all they need to do is walk out.
They could do it if they wanted to, but they cant be cowards.
I think too many military people think about career first or are jingoistic.
"serves at the pleasure of the President" "the pleasure of the President, the pleasure of the President" why can't this moral midget get his pleasure the way Bill Clinton or Eliot Spitzer did? He has to start wars to get his rocks off. I'm afraid Zbigniew Breszinski and RebelFarmer are right. The only thing to save us now is dumb, pure, good luck. Then again, maybe that's all it ever was for the human race. Just coasting along oblivious to our own precarious place in the universe. What would really be funny is if a gamma-ray burst pre-empted the apocalypse. All those pompous hotheads wiped out by the deaf & dumb universe. Sorry, I'm in the mood for misanthropic irony.
Katy, ___ "BAR THE DOOR"!!
I have a very bad feeling. Stock up on essentials.
Obama __ Fallon? That would work. Hillary__ Fallon? That would work too. Fallon_ Edwards or Kucinich would be better.
When is General Betray Us going to get the call to step-up to an even broader role? BushCo has a real sycophant to get the country into even more trouble.
Bush and Cheney are not evil. They are sufferng from the Semmelweis Reflex disorder. Google Semmelweis. Then scroll down to "Semmelweis Reflex".
I believe a great philosopher once said, "It ain't over, til it's over." Anyway, good things can happen in the final inning. Still, I agree, 'Stock up on essentials.'
My guess is that he also complained about the ginboat diplomacy off Lebanon as well.
Anybody need to change their best shot in the pool on the date we nuke Iran?
CIsn't it illegal by international law to make threats of aggression and/or military intervention/strikes against other countries who have not threatened to use, or have NOT used military force against any other country? Wouldn't it be something to hear a host of other countries remind the U.S. publicly of that — and then have the media report it? Too bad it won't happen — they're either for U.S. agression, or they're a bunch of chicken-s**ts.
orrection to my earlier statement --
C S Petraeus, the bootlicker, gets his revenge.
From the Esquire interview - Fallon on illegal war with Iran: "Get serious. They're ants. WHEN the time comes, we'll crush them."
Stop buying into the propaganda, peeps. There's the money quote. The only problem Loonitary Decider had with Ant Crusher Fallon is WHEN to start crushing 75+ million "ants" living in a country over 4000 years old, not IF.
Stop showing deference to Fallon - he's a murdering SOB who considers the population of Iran a colony of ants to crush.
A spokeswoman for President Beelzebush (Lord of the Lies) says the head of the US Central Military Command is not being forced to resign...
Sure, and about that bridge in Brooklyn...
I also really like the idea of Obama/Fallon. A lot more than the idea of Obama/Clinton (gag). I think a ticket like that would go well with the public. They love the idea of brass, and he's got it in spades. I don't think Fallon would join Hillary, she's too much like Bush, trying to prove she has cojones. I think if she wasn't so insecure, things would be different, but it's hard to imagine living with Bill and being secure.
hybridoma, the answer to your question is "yes" but only if they agree with Bush. Otherwise, show them the door. So did Fallon really call Petraeus an "ass-kissing little chicken shit"? Or was that wishful thinking on the part of his friends? I would guess if he didn't use those exact words, he had something of that nature in mind.
Bumpy times ahead.
Hi Rebel Farmer, good to hear from you.
kathyodat
Hooray for Fallon! To make it in the Bush administration you HAVE to be an ass-kissing little chickens**t.
It's refreshing to see someone in a command position who isn't just another spineless asskisser and who has the kahones to say it like it is, kudos to this admiral! Unfortunately Americans have been incrementally brainwashed by political correctness and the rest of the Orwellian tripe rendering feminized males in leadership positions who will no doubt scream the loudest when they awake in a gulag.
As much as like Fallon, let's wait and see what he does in retirement. Shinseki hid.
Would it not have been a greater act of heroism to have stayed on as commander of centcom and stood up to the war mongering bastards?(not that he isn't one also, but there are degrees). Why leave the post now when he may be the only person who could effectively prevent an attack on Iran?
Is he just one more dissenter forced into obscurity while the fascists hone their spears of murder.
Maybe he'll be like all the others who go back to their cushy homes and write a book about big, bad, nasty, George and Co. and pad their retirement portfolios with the extra income. Meanwhile the world watches as a military beast threatens all corners of this planet.
This guy is something of a puzzle. After Ahmadinehad visited Iraq, he and General Odiorno are said, in a March 10 LA Times article, to have "accused his regime of destabilizing Iraq." "Odiorno, calling Iran the greatest long-term threat to Iraq, accused Tehran of trying to keep the Baghdad government weak for its own benefit. Fallon cited evidence that Iran continued to train and equip militants in Iraq." [Has anyone other than American military personnel SEEN this evidence they keep talking about?]
Fallon has said more than once since his resignation that he does agree with the Bush administration. What to believe?
(How about Obama and Wesley Clark?)
Be interesting to see what Adm. Fallon says over the next 6 months. .He sure as Hell, isn't going to remain silent when Bush and the NeoCons attack Iran and Pakistan.
"Five Deferment Dick" and George "Wacko" Bush are upset, that Gates didn't keep Adm. Fallon muzzled for the next 6 or 7 months. .That is very interesting !!!!!!!!!!
We can be grateful that he has stood up against a military invasion of Iran. .No U.S. Department of Defense official, either civilian or military personnel know the Near East, Middle East, or the Asian/Pacific Regions better than Adm. Fallon. .After his retirement, at the end of this month, he can speak out, without restraint, and honestly evaluate the military situation.
OK ladybug, you got me there. How about this: that the world join together to save themselves from us.
At a time when the White House is defending torture against military advice and dragnet FISA rights without congressional oversight, it is refreshing to see a military leader refuse to cave in to the "crazies." Now we must hope there are more left behind him.
When Admiral Fallon referred to the Iranians as "ants" and we would cruch them, I'm sure he was being sarcastic about our adinistration, not speaking for himself. That comment was in the future tense.
I bet Betrayus will replace him.
> I think too many military people think about career first or are jingoistic.
I've heard it quipped, the military is where people care more for their career then their life.
Bush has pushed it to the point though where they'll have to decide if it's worth destroying their career and possibly reputation. The perverse part is if they're successful then it can be argued that obviously there was never a chance of invading Iran. Therefore, what they did to stop it was not only unnecessary but set bad precedents, broke the law, etc.
Only if self-immolation fails and we invade anyhow, then they will be vindicated. Not that it mattered and now they don't matter either. Probably won't get back legal fees or lost pension either. So vindicated but still the short end of the stick.
It's not a minor sacrifice to commit career-suicide. It's not a minor changing of jobs. It's more like immolating yourself in public like Spitzer, minus the fun.
A leap or a bang
A leap or a bang
What will it be
Eternity or time
Time or eternity
Light what it is it?
Got some life got a light what kind of light can you put on this?
Light life what is it? ..A wave a particle?… an infinite conundrum
Will it be a bang or infinite sleep?
Could we have another big bang
Perhaps expanding to a new we
A COOPERATIVE we
A get along we?
Are there infinite infinities?
Will it be a bang
Or A leap
Or infinite sleep?
Gutten abent gutten nacht
Sleep in shock and awe
Gutten abent gutten nacht
Sleep in shock
Sleep in awe
Will it be a leap?
Will it be a bang?
will it be a leap or will it be a bang?
Well' bill it out to you
Corporate no time… time light
Will it be a leap or a bang
Will it be a Petreus moment at the end of time
Eternity or time, time or eternity
Light what is it …a particle .. a wave..?
Will there be an exponential leap from Dubahya..
from duck head to a better time?
or just... ooooooh .....
The flat line.. bottom line..spritzer nine!
the arm greed get in on time
Well, with Fallon out of the road it's all systems go. Iran had better prepare for the Israeli/American nukes while it can because that would appear inevitable now.
His description of 'the crazies in the White House was correct.' However, it would've been more correct to say, 'the crazies in the White House and Israel of course.'
So what does the world do now? We just sit and wait for the crazies to lead us into WW3. What else can we do?
www.dangerouscreation.com
How many people are left in the original administration now? bush, cheney, rice and not many more. Yeah, right listen to generals on the ground. One thing is clear now - cheney/bush will attack Iran just in time for marshal law come Sept or Oct. Hope I'm wrong but history does repeat itself when it comes to wars.
Our dear leader Bu$h the inferior summarily dumping someone with a differing viewpoint! Say it ain't so!
I am shocked, shocked, that the eloquent and supremely logical leader couldn't convince this wayward and naive Admiral to genuflect on cue. Perhaps if he was waterboarded he would be convinced of the error of his ways and name his fellow conspirators.
It is apparent the only sane person connected with this whore house, I mean white house, has left.
Bush needs someone in charge that will do any insane thing that they think of without question. Next summer, at the proper time, a military action of some type just could come in handy, and guess who we will need to elect to handle it?
In this administration, good men get the shaft, sycophants get medals. It seems strange to have elected (appointed) officials always wanting war, and top military leaders advising caution.
Read WITHOUT CONSCIENCE, The Disturbing World of The Psychopaths Among Us" - Robert D. Hare, Ph.D., before the Psychopaths among us not only continue disturbing the world, but maybe destroy it.
At least we'll have some understanding of how this all happened as we're being blown away.
Where are you, Rambo?
Blame Bush if you like. But its the moron voters who helped him steal two elections that bear most blame. They have more blood on their hands more than this inept zealot, who abuses are by no means limited to this ill conceived war. Don't forget the five Supreme court justices who betrayed their oath by placing politics ahead of honor by planting him in office; nor many of our legislators who have betrayed our trust by tolerating these unprecedented abuses.
The correct pronunciation KEM is General Betrayus! Otherwise you are correct as the neocons have stacked the deck against us all.
As for blaming Bush who cares its the people pulling his strings that frightens me more.
The public will have to wait for the book to find out the details of his "dissenting views" until after the million dollar book deal is signed.