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Why Petraeus Can't Make The Sale
As Gen. David Petraeus kicks off an extended media blitz intended to make Americans feel better about the war in Afghanistan -- or at least give him some more time to fight it -- he faces a foe more implacable than al Qaeda, or even the Taliban: Reality.
That reality, increasingly obvious to national security experts and the general public alike, is that no amount of good intentions or firepower is going to advance our fundamental interests in Afghanistan -- and that as much as Petraeus might be able to achieve in the next six months, or a year, little to none of it is sustainable and most of it is, even worse, counterproductive.
U.S. taxpayers are spending vast amounts of money on the war -- over $200 million a day for military operations alone. Our troops work tirelessly, fight and die to protect and build up the people and institutions of Afghanistan.
But how that turns into success remains wildly unclear. And even more importantly, the relationship between what we're doing on a day to day basis and our ostensible goal -- keeping America safe from al Qaeda -- seems increasingly tenuous.
In the first of many planned interviews, Petraeus will tell NBC's David Gregory on "Meet the Press" on Sunday that his intention is "to show those in Washington that there is progress being made" and to persuade decision-makers "that we've got to build on the progress that has been established so far."
But what Petraeus can't do is say with any confidence that this "progress" can be sustained. Nor can he connect it to an actual threat to our national security.
By contrast, in a reflection of an emerging new consensus in the national security community, a self-styled "Team B" on Afghanistan strategy is advocating much narrower goals and reduced military commitment in the region.
According to an advance copy of the group's forthcoming report, "the war in Afghanistan has reached a critical crossroads. Our current path promises to have limited impact on the civil war while taking more American lives and contributing to skyrocketing taxpayer debt. We conclude that a fundamentally new direction is needed."
The report represents the views of about 40 influential national security figures from academia, think tanks and the business community. Organizer Steve Clemons of the New America Foundation said the group is varied in its makeup, but unified by its doubts about the current course.
Its survey of the landscape concludes: "We are mired in a civil war in Afghanistan and are struggling to establish an effective central government in a country that has long been fragmented and decentralized. No matter how desirable this objective might be in the abstract, it is not essential to U.S. security and it is not a goal for which the U.S. military is well suited. There is no clear definition of what would comprise 'success' in this endeavor, and creating a unified Afghan state would require committing many more American lives and hundreds of billions of additional U.S. dollars for many years to come."
"General Petraeus is a smart man and he attracts smart people and I know that since he's been given this onerous duty, he's been looking at at least tactical and operational shifts," said Patrick Cronin, a South Asian expert at the Center for a New American Security and one of the contributors to the report. "But what he isn't addressing is the need for a new political strategy."
Cronin said Petraeus's target audience "shouldn't buy into this military incrementalism. 'Six months more' is not a strategy."
Brian Katulis, a national security expert at the Center for American Progress, said he is worried that members of the Obama administration have lost sight of what he calls the fundamental question: "Are we actually keeping Americans safe?"
"Are we actually preventing people from flying planes into our buildings?"
"Some of the most striking arguments for continuing the conflict are actually sunk costs and national pride and honor," Katulis said. We keep going because "we've spent so much and it would be such an awful thing not to justify the costs and lives."
The war's goal at this point seems to be establishing overall stability in the country. But among the many other problems, Katulis said, there's no good way to measure that; officers on the ground are reduced to tallying things like the number of stores open at night, or the number of shoppers at a market.
That sort of metric leads Katulis and other national security experts to wonder: What does that have to do with the security of our own country? And to the extent that it does, is it really the best use of our resources? What about the threats to our homeland developing in other parts of the world?
Cronin said Petraeus should be forced to explain not just what he intends to do, but how it can be sustained. If he drives the Taliban out of one region -- "if we do sacrifice those lives to do that" -- it still "doesn't put us on a sustainable glidepath," he said.
"Petraeus wants to buy more time, because he needs time to demonstrate that what he's doing can have a positive effect," Cronin said. "But it doesn't have a large enough positive effect, and it's too costly in terms of blood and treasure."
"Yes, there are different views of this war," he added, "but if you look at enough of the evidence, you can't be sanguine that we are indeed winning hearts and minds" -- which is a critical goal of Petraeus's counter-insurgency strategy. In fact, Cronin said, the evidence suggests that we are making ourselves "even less popular than the Taliban... we are making them stronger, and what we're doing is not effective enough."
With al Qaeda essentially gone from Afghanistan, "the original purpose has largely dissipated," Cronin said. "This strategy is actually being counterproductive for our interests."
Katulis also notes that the administration's plan still lacks a clear, positive goal. "If you go through all of the senior administration officials' talking points, they often define the goal as a negative."
The most senior administration official is fond of saying things like: "I've set a clear and achievable mission -- to disrupt, dismantle and defeat al Qaeda and its extremist allies and prevent their return"
But, said Katulis, "that doesn't actually tell us what it is we actually have to leave behind."
Petraeus is said the be starting to hedge on President Obama's promised deadline of July 2011 for withdrawing American troops.
That's hardly surprising. As I reported two weeks ago, the timeline for an American troop withdrawal has steadily been growing longer for some time, with Obama's deadline looking more and more hollow, and the real timeline for significant troop withdrawal -- barring a change in course -- now extending at least to 2014, if not far beyond.
But from Cronin's perspective, Obama had a year to turn things around, and it's already over. "That's enough empirical evidence to know if there is something that can be salvaged here," he said.
Cronin said the "Team B" solution is "something in between what we've been doing and complete abandonment. It's not that it's a guarantee of success, but we've got to recognize that what we're doing now is not succeeding, either."
Cronin said U.S. national security does not depend on the military defeat of the Taliban, or on a strong central government. The plan instead calls for power-sharing, and for a smaller military presence that focuses on keeping al Qaeda at bay.
So if it's increasingly clear outside the military and the executive branch that a radical reassessment of the war is necessary, why isn't it clear inside?
"If there's one thing that drives the current officer corps in our military it's that they want to avoid the sense of a loss, and perception of another Vietnam," Katulis said.
As for inside the White House, "there's the political and rhetorical box that they themselves have set," Katulis said.
It's also possible that Obama is thinking things he just can't say out loud.
"Our Afghan partners are just not up to the task of what we would like to see," said Cronin. "You can't say that as a government when you're knee deep in a war. But at the end of the day, you have to be realistic about U.S. interests."
And as long as the war is being fought, "the president can't afford to look incoherent on this," Cronin said. "This president in particular, because he'll be attacked from the right, has to look strong on this issue."
Obama "can't afford to have Joe Biden and others leading an ongoing critique of the war" which is why he "put a lid on that last year," Cronin said. Nevertheless, "I think the reality is that inside the administration there continue to be serious people with serious doubts about where this is heading."
But there's yet another force preventing Obama from pivoting, according to Katulis: The possibility that, after he reduces the military footprint in Afghanistan, someone from that country then comes to the U.S. and commits and act of terror.
Staying in Afghanistan for that reason, however, is strikingly reminiscent of former Vice President Cheney's notorious "One Percent Doctrine," as described in the Ron Suskind book by that name. Cheney's basic view was that if there's even a one percent threat of a "high-impact" terrorist event, then the government should respond as if it were a certainty. That led to a lot of overkill.
Cronin said he thinks the president doesn't have much choice. "I think there are fewer and fewer people who are willing to give just a blank check for what's going on," he said.
And Cronin said he thinks Obama "can find a way to make this politically more palatable" by following through with his promised July 2011 drawdown, continuing to make the case for a pivot toward a more diplomatic, less military-intensive strategy. And he can make the case that "there are plenty of other threats out in the world that we're ignoring because of this."
Afghanistan is overkill in the wrong place, Katulis said. "We're really running a risk of having a national security strategy that is not in balance globally."
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76 Comments so far
Show AllHello. Why is it that even "progressive" American journalists refuse to discuss the well documented plans for the development of Pipelineistan, that is, corporate hegemony over Central Asian energy resources for private profit ? These plans have been in place since the 1990's. Are the journalists all complicit or simply incompetent ?
We can expect criminal complicity from the White House and Congress, but there used to be such a thing as investigative journalism.
Public opinion in American would turn against the occupation much faster if EVERYONE knew this is little more than a corporate imperial occupation to further future profits of American energy corporations seeking hegemony over Central Asian resources that will be marketed in Asia for huge profits for a long time to come.
This corporate globalization plan is looting the Federal treasury to sustain their schemes at a time when the American economy is imploding.
These are war crimes designed to create private corporate profit paid for with public debt for decades to come.
Pepe Escobar and Asia Times have lots of information on this globalization hydrocarbon war plan.
http://www.alternet.org/world/139983/pipeline-istan:_everything_you_need_to_know_about_oil,_gas,_russi...
Pipeline-Istan: Everything You Need to Know About Oil, Gas, Russia, China, Iran, Afghanistan and Obama
excerpt:
"And then, of course, there are those competing pipelines that, if ever built, either would or wouldn't exclude Iran and Russia from the action to their south. In April 2008, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India actually signed an agreement to build a long-dreamt-about $7.6 billion (and counting) pipeline, whose acronym TAPI combines the first letters of their names and would also someday deliver natural gas from Turkmenistan to Pakistan and India without the involvement of either Iran or Russia. It would cut right through the heart of Western Afghanistan, in Herat, and head south across lightly populated Nimruz and Helmand provinces, where the Taliban, various Pashtun guerrillas and assorted highway robbers now merrily run rings around U.S. and NATO forces and where -- surprise! -- the U.S. is now building in Dasht-e-Margo ("the Desert of Death") a new mega-base to host President Obama's surge troops."
And this is only one of many Central Asian pipeline dreams via Afghanistan.
The occupation is benefiting the MIC investors.
However long it takes, the longer the better.
Drag it on and let people say whatever.
It's:
Financial Security!
Reality was outlawed in Washington DC (DC stands for Delusion Central)before most of you readers were born.
When LBJ was president they said his credibilty gap was big enough to fly a B52 through. Team Obama's credibility gap is so wide you can fly every bomber the USAF owns through it in V-formation.
Our troops fight and die to protect the people of Afghanistan??? PLEEAASSE DAN! Enough said.
I stopped reading the article at that point.
Ditto.
"Our troops fight and die to protect the people of Afghanistan??? PLEEAASSE DAN! Enough said."
What????? I thought they were protecting us!!!......Or something like like that... Now I don't feel safe anymore!!!!
Froomkin is, of course, right to report the fact that doubt is mounting about this phoney war even among "the national security community."
However, he is still avoiding his responsibilities as a reporter: he is not discussing the industrial (or economic), energetic, and geopolitical motives for the United States' occupation of Afghanistan (and Iraq, for that matter).
Empire's presence in Afghanistan has nothing to do with the plight of Afghan women, with democracy, with terrorism, with catching Osama bin Laden (no one even knows where the man is; worse, we don't even know whether he is alive); it is all about energetic and mineral resources, and geopolitical power games (see the articles posted here at CD about the U.S. Geological Survey of Afghanistan's mineral and fossil fuel riches).
There were more honest reporters in the Soviet Union than this well-wisher of the Orwellian "national security community":
http://www.chomsky.info/articles/198912--.htm
Oikos
Very good point as Froomkin believes that the United States is in Afghanistan in order to protect and sustain the "fundamental interests" of the United States though Froomkin neglects to mention what exactly those fundamental interests are which keeps the United States military bogged down in Afghanistan as well as in Iraq.
As someone pointed out: Reality will deal with you whether you're in the room or not. Neither Petraeus nor Obama nor any other Ruling Class major domo is in the room. Makes no difference.
Hi Mordechai,
I am going to disagree. I am convinced that George Orwell got it right.
Reality did not step in in 2002/2003, when we invaded to rid the world of the WMD and the "threat to the world" that Iraq posed. Reality did not bite when the "surge" was declared to be a success. So long as the corporate media is able to trumpet cherry picked issues and ignore inconvenient facts that give the lie, they can still convince most of the USA that a blue painting is red, by only unveiling the tiny red bits.
I know some Russians. They explain to me that people reached a point of disbelief. They told me that people only believed some of what they were told. That people looked on the official news with skepticism. That has not happened in the USA, and Stalin would have been insanely jealous of U.S. perception management. The "perception management" industry has been become highly developed though advertising and marketing. Papers that do not attract an audience go broke. The propaganda "technology" has been refined to the point where they are able to plant inception, and let you think that you came to your own conclusions. Information coming from friends or neighbors is now considered practically worthless - a poor substitute for being told something to by the telly.
I would recommend a Russian movie entitle 'Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears'.
It is available on NETFLIX online.
It has to be a good movie because 'I seen it on TV'.
the point of the never-ending US imperial military occupations is to provide cover for the transfer of millons of American taxpayer dollars into the pockets of corporations, such as Blackwater and Halliburton, and into the pockets of hundreds of thousands of private contractors, mercenaries, terrorists and miscellaneous Hessians. Heck of a job, Bush and Barack...
In other news, in the face of awful floods in Pakistan, the Obama drone murder machines are still doing their dirty work.
Yahoo story today: Officials: US missiles kill 12 in north Pakistan. So Obama is saving some Pakistanis with his flood relief efforts and is murdering others. Is this dual track program of US psychopathic and schizophrenic?
I wonder if history will ever formally record that "With the invention of the internet, living groups like common dreams published for more than a decade and discussed and came to a general consensus on every issue in real time that the US government got wrong over the years, while government spokesmen never gave these people credit for being correct in their judgement of the issues and politicians in office".
That would be a revolution... and a long sentence
and why Petraeus can't make the sale.
Follow the pipelines Froomkin!
We leave when the oil runs dry and the gas is gone.
I think basically social political struggle boils down to the clashing of two dominant human personality types.
Those who want to close the case and those who want to keep it open.
And we all do both depending on how we feel the heat.
I wonder, Mr. Glover, did you ever wonder how Left-Brain vs. Right-Brain works into this equation?
It seems to me, Right-Brain activity is a more evolved development, and that the Reptilian-Brained still reign supreme. (Not to denigrate lizards; my back yard is a lizard's paradise. I love those little guys.)
Perhaps we could come up with a more appropriate labeling for Reptilian-Brain. After all, Republicans create words all the time. How about Cheney-Brain?
The POINT of continuing the war in Afghanistan is to CONTINUE the war in Afghanistan. The US will leave Iraq and
Afghanistan the same day it leaves Germany, Japan, Italy, Spain, Greece, Korea, Colombia, Guam... well, you get the idea.
Just imagine.
Here it is 65 years after the end of WWII and we still have German and Japanese bases occupying the best real estate in the USA. We've long been wondering when they might leave, after rewriting our constitution for us at the end of the war. It really pissed off a lot of people when the Germans detonated an atomic bomb over Chicago and the Japanese did the same over Seattle, killing hundreds of thousands of innocent people. The president had been begging for weeks to be allowed to surrender but they said they had to drop those bombs to save German and Japanese lives. Of course the US never developed nuclear arms due to certain clauses inserted into our new constitution by the Germans and the Japanese. At this point I just wish they would leave our country. Its creepy having their soldiers at checkpoints 65 years after the war. I don't see the POINT of them staying so long. And the really annoying thing is, they never bother to learn English. They rape our women and we give them a pass. They kill our people in automobile accidents and we just give them a pass. God Almighty when are the Germans and Japanese ever going to leave our country?
After we train your police and military and insure that our bases are secure from enemy takeover....
Long live the Emperor and Who got the gold now?
Hey, quit your whining - you Americans *started* the war when you launched a simultaneous sneak attack on the Japanese Naval Base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, and the German Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
You thought you could wipe out New Reich power in North America, but you just awakened the Sleeping Giant.
Now our troops are protecting you from Canada, Iran and India, among other Evildoers. You should pay us *more* for all the security we've given you for so many decades - the Fatherland is getting tired of shouldering the burden for you cheese eating surrender monkeys.
"Our troops work tirelessly, fight and die to protect and build up the people and institutions of Afghanistan. "
Dan bought that frame, at some neocon frame store.
" . . . and institutions."
That's classic. I'm going to store that bromide in Our Chives.
Fascist amerika occupations ARE terrorist acts; that includes the brainwashed troops ! Dan f. is a puppet for the empire !
Oval12345678 (2:18 pm) and NMBill (4:12 pm) hit the nail on the head. why are we always at war w/ vulnerable nations ?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military-industrial_complex
----------
----------
Masters Of War
Come you masters of war
You that build all the guns
You that build the death planes
You that build the big bombs
You that hide behind walls
You that hide behind desks
I just want you to know
I can see through your masks
You that never done nothin’
But build to destroy
You play with my world
Like it’s your little toy
You put a gun in my hand
And you hide from my eyes
And you turn and run farther
When the fast bullets fly
Like Judas of old
You lie and deceive
A world war can be won
You want me to believe
But I see through your eyes
And I see through your brain
Like I see through the water
That runs down my drain
You fasten the triggers
For the others to fire
Then you set back and watch
When the death count gets higher
You hide in your mansion
As young people’s blood
Flows out of their bodies
And is buried in the mud
You’ve thrown the worst fear
That can ever be hurled
Fear to bring children
Into the world
For threatening my baby
Unborn and unnamed
You ain’t worth the blood
That runs in your veins
How much do I know
To talk out of turn
You might say that I’m young
You might say I’m unlearned
But there’s one thing I know
Though I’m younger than you
Even Jesus would never
Forgive what you do
Let me ask you one question
Is your money that good
Will it buy you forgiveness
Do you think that it could
I think you will find
When your death takes its toll
All the money you made
Will never buy back your soul
And I hope that you die
And your death’ll come soon
I will follow your casket
In the pale afternoon
And I’ll watch while you’re lowered
Down to your deathbed
And I’ll stand o’er your grave
’Til I’m sure that you’re dead
bob dylan - 1963
...peace...
I've seen this Dylan song quite a bit; for those who like it here's an offering from Amiri Baraka: http://www.amiribaraka.com/blew.html
thanks!
They're gonna wish they saved their $100's of billions when Iran gets tired of the "we might invade you next month, or the month after that, or maybe tomorrow" crap -
and turns around and chooses the time and place of first attack (with a suitable "Tonkin Gulf" excuse - the US isn't the only country that can make up excuses to start a war).
Unlike a nickel and dime occupation of a failed state like Afghanistan, a full out War against Iran would break the bank in a few years, hammer Wall St., and bring the US oil--based economy to its knees (stopping all the oil flow in the Persian Gulf area will do that...)
Which Iran knows.
And so does China and Russia, who stand to gain in the New World Order after the US superpower is broken. As does most of South America. And dozens of other countries.
The US will truly learn who its "allies" are when it is weak and on the brink of becoming a has-been superpower. I bet France and Germany still remember those "Old Europe" insults...
Afghanistan will be a distant memory when a Real Problem shows up.
but you can bet your bottom dollar that the 'poodles' will still be whimpering in the background............
"Our troops work tirelessly, fight and die to protect and build up the people and institutions of Afghanistan."
__________________________________
I'm guessing that many of us have worked in jobs that use "Quality Control" critiques in which sample work products are selected, then analyzed using a checklist of criteria that adds or subtracts points to determine whether the work meets or fails production standards.
My personal informal, idiosyncratic QC evaluation subtracts MAJOR points when the writer slips in bogus factoids like the one quoted above. It at least needs a disclaimer, e.g. "The Official Story (or even Conventional Wisdom) is that...".
That aside, this article merely affirms what many of us knew all along: Afghanistan is a child's "Chinese finger trap"* puzzle-- a flexible tube of bamboo sized to accomodate a fingertip at each end. The "trickster" has the subject insert a finger in each end and the subject has to figure out how to get free.
It's not exactly a challenge on the level of "Rubik's Cube", but the naïve subject typically tries to free him/herself by tugging in opposite directions. However, this causes the tube to contract, trapping the fingers more and more tightly.
Here, the "organizers" and "experts" go up one side and down the other, leaving us with the general impression that regardless of how much public support Petraeus et al can generate, Afghanistan remains a Chinese finger trap in which our Elected Misrepresentatives (political "leaders") will remain committed to "smarter" and more refined tugging.
But the Amerikan Imperium isn't going anywhere; it will simply tug its talons until doomsday-- which may not be that far off, alas!
* I have no idea whether "Chinese finger trap" is on the idiotic PC "streng verboten" list, or has been renamed, and I could care less.
I have never been able to figure out why we didn't buy oil from Iraq, then buy whatever we wanted from Afghanistan perhaps after a couple of bombs in 2001 for AlQaeda and 911. Think of what could have been done with all that money to really win hearts and minds. Instead we are still dropping bombs, building prisons, mammoth "embassies" ike the Green Zons, plus Walmarts and Subways for the military.
In Afghanistan, we could have helped with agriculture, education and other life-giving projects.
Now we owe both countries reparations big-time, Iraq perhaps more than Afghanistan since so much of the country has been destroyed (Fallujah, Baghdad partitioned, many areas poisoned (with depleted uranium), plus people randomly killed, wounded and displaced starting with the 1991 Gulf War. By the way what good did that war accomplish?
I think you miss the point of the war. The point is the transfer of wealth to a certain group of people, a very small group of people. There are many ways of making big bucks. Be BP or a stock holder with thousands of shares and sell gas to US troops for $200 a gallon. A wee mark-up. Notice the transfer from taxpayer, even if they are jobless through direct taxes,to a wealthy share holder who probably pays minimum taxes.Killing Afghanis who highjack your tractor trailer full of gas or happen to get in your way on the road is collateral damage to the profit for those gallons. BP will have to spend $ to cover that with a slick ad campaign. Ah collateral damage is a bitch.
Or you could form a company that hires gang members, convicts, ex- military and other thugs to provide murders for hire oops I mean "security forces/ contractors" Or you could be one.
None of the profits from gas, transportation, materials like pipe, pumps and drilling equipment or security both contracted and voluntary would be possible without war. This does not even count the guns, ammo, trucks, planes or ships and their costs.
This is all US taxpayer money being transferred in the name of war and security to a wealth elite. If you bought what you wanted this transfer could not occur. Here lies the importance of "false flag" events. It is hard to pull this stuff off without one.
Buy oil from Iraq?
Ah . . . why . . . ah . . . that could have cost Billions!
Do you think money grows on Chinese corktrees?
The idea may have been to ensure that someone else could not buy it.
What about just flying over and dropping money.. You could even call the money bombs to make the military feel that they are doing something.
KB, do you really believe Al-Quaeda, perpetrated 911, oh, they placed the explosives in the bldgs. exactly when? Was that before or after Silverstein bought his terrorist insurance.
It was never about BUYING the Oil. Saddam was selling the oil in Currencies other then US dollars.
Thus in order to BUY the oil the USA would first had to EARN other currencies.
Once Bremer forced the Iraqi Government to sell oil in US dollars again, the USA could in essence get the oil for free. They print dollars.
Correct GW. What was never reported in the whore press was that America attacked Iraq just shortly after Saddam changed the oil bourse and the first thing on the U.S. agenda after we occupied Iraq was to change the oil bourse to U.S. currency. Iran just did the same thing and says it will no longer accept American $ for its oil.
Wherever he speaks General Betrayus should be hounded by anti-war activists shouting slogans reminiscent of the Vietnam War, except instead of "Hey, hey, LBJ, how many Vietnamese have you killed today", how about "Hey, Hey, General Betrayus, how many Afghanis & Americans have you killed today?"
Petraeus is the perfect General for the Emperor, working tirelessly for the Dark Side against the Truth and against the freedom loving citizens. Remember, the Neocons believe reality is something you create, so it's never a problem. Let the buyer beware, the sale will go through.
"Afghanistan is overkill in the wrong place..."
Oh, I get it; there are 'right' places for overkill. Huff, Huff, Huff: MSM bull, and hosted by CD to boot. What a farcical hoot!
Sometimes I wonder, "Have there been any articles that mention "The Plan For A New American Century?" Afghanistan was targetted because The Taliban, who were placed in power by the United States, gave the "OIL PIPELINE CONTRACT" to Bridas Oil of Argentina in 1997!
National Security is "American Vital Interests", "OIL"! President Kohler of Germany was forced to resign after he spoke, "We are in Afghanistan for our economic vital interests." "The Myth" is more important than "The Truth"...."The Carter Doctrine" written by Zbigniew Brzezinski in 1980 clearly states, "The United States has the right to use military force whenever America's Vital Interests are threatened in the Persian Gulf Region."
"The myth that terrorists are a threat to National Security is like looking at the 2000 AMA Study of accidental deaths in hospitals, "98,000 to 100,000 People die each year from mistakes made in American Hospitals"....Think about it, How many people die from: murders, car accidents, complications from prescription drugs etc?.....
Myth: A guy in a cave was able to have NORAD plan 5 practice exercises on 9/11/2001 so that 4 hijacked planes could not be intercepted had to be part of the master plan. Why would you not question Cheney's decision for that specific day?
New Think Tanks and Commissions fail to include, people like me: a veteran, a public school teacher (retired), an avid reader of non-fiction, and a left of center economic conservative (Oh, diploma in Political Science IU 1971). So you never get the history: al-Qaeda created by the United States, Taliban put in power by the United States, Jundallah (A Taliban Organization) is funded by the United States to destabilize Iran (Congress approved 400 million for the destabilization of Iran July 2008 most of which went to Jundallah.).
The Myth to the "Power Elite" is more important than "The Truth"!
"Myth: A guy in a cave was able to have NORAD plan 5 practice exercises on 9/11/2001 so that 4 hijacked planes could not be intercepted had to be part of the master plan. Why would you not question Cheney's decision for that specific day?"
The situation we have today all stems from 911 thanks to all the propaganda that followed. There is, however, some security camera films out there, no doubt declared above top secret, that show what actually hit the pentagon on 911. And it was no airliner. Most likely it was a cruise missle, and those security tapes will show it if some brave whistle blower has the guts to release them. 911 would be blown wide open then to be exposed as the bunch of lies that it really is.
Incredible! "We're really running a risk of having a national security strategy that is not in balance globally."
Running a risk? You mean it's currently in balance and might not be sometime in the future? What kind of balance could the speaker possibly have been talking about?
This remark is completely insane and totally out of touch with reality. What does it mean that the author repeated it without comment?
In the Republic, Plato's dream state administered by philosopher-kings, its harmonic stability was threatened by "the poets," a metaphorical group that transferred historically interpretative events from one group to another through the oral tradition. Plato knew that these people were the ones who could change black into white and change the experiential perceptions of reality by interpretation. In the Republic's utopia, the poets were controlled by the philosopher-kings/state. Plato commented that 'if we (the philosopher-kings) can control the information people receive, we can control what they think.' Aptly understood by Plato, and exquisitely implemented today. The MSM and its clonic imitators wants to keep us in-formation with the anesthetizing perceptions that keep us cogs grinding away within the heart of a heartless machine.
Three other contravening realities that effect the US in its war against Afghanistan.
1) The least expensive and unobstructed way of moving the oil/gas resources from Central Asia to the West is through a pacified Afghanistan to the Arabian Sea.
2) The only way for the West (i.e. Western corporations) to easily extract enormous mineral wealth from Afghanistan is if the nation is pacified.
3) The best strategic positioning of US forces in a future war against Iran is on that countries eastern and western flanks, in Iraq and Afghanistan (the US believes it can depend on Pakistan and Turkmenistan to provide northern and south-eastern access if necessary).
I just finished an article in Sunday's "El Mundo"...."Aynak,Un Monasterio Budista Bajo El Tesoro De Cobre."
Remember, this past June, there were announcements of great mineral deposits throughout Afghanistan......Excuse me, according to the article I mentioned, China signed an agreement with the Karzai Government in 2007 to begin mining for copper, estimated at 240 MILLION TONS, at Aynak. The Chinese Government was to pay 800 MILLION Dollars for the exploration rights and an additional 400 million in taxes each year of the 30 year contract........If Afghanistan were Norway, their people would be taken care of for the next 30 years and more!
This area was where al-Qaeda's bases were. The Captain who was showing the reporters al-Qaeda caves was asked about the bombings....It seems they did strike the caves, but only appeared to bomb the entries of the caves:
"Pregunto por que' los bombardeos impactaron frente a la
entrada de las galerias y no sobre ellas. Nadie sabe responder.
¿No querian eliminarlos? Lo mas facil habria sido taponar
las entradas. Quizas ya entonces su objetivo no era
acabar con ellos, sino simplemente hacerles cambiar de
escondrijo cada cierto tiempo."
You have a reporter that noticed there was no attempt to destroy al-Qaeda. Perhaps the reports of multiples of vehicles leaving the area as soldiers watched are not exagerrated. Perhaps Pat Tillman was too smart and was writing about his experience and knew that there was no attempt to capture al-Qaeda.
Perhaps Americans should be told who created al-Qaeda and for what purpose....If William Cooper was right about CNN interviewing Osama Bin Laden in June 2001 and if Bin Laden claimed that an attack on the U.S. would be blamed on him in June 2001, then why did Cheney order 5 practice exercises for NORAD to be held on 9/11/2001 that would effectively prevent any interception of 4 hijacked planes.....There is no way that was not part of "The Master Plan"........
Oil, minerals worth trillions and the most corrupt government in the World supported by the CIA and its allies: ISI of Pakistan and The Saudi Royal Family.
Wow, "Change you can believe in!"
Headline this morning at Al Jazeera.net:
"Afghanistan Finds New Oil Deposits": see
english.aljazeera.net/news/asia/2010/
08/20108159431776396.html
In that same article, one may also read the following:
"The untapped mineral resources include iron ore, copper, lithium, oil, gas and gems, which Afghanistan hopes to develop in the near future despite rising insecurity in recent years - the bloodiest period since US-led troops ousted the
Taliban in 2001.
The US department of defence estimated earlier this year that Afghanistan's mineral resources could top $1 trillion, but experts say the fragile security situation could delay seeing the benefits of this wealth for years."
The last sentence in the citation tells us how long there will be U.S. armed forces in Afghanistan, and it also gives a very fitting job description for the U.S. military: it assesses the mineral and fossil fuel wealth of foreign lands. "Making the world safe for democracy" (Woodrow Wilson's phrase) is, oddly enough, not part of that description.
Yeah, Woodrow Wilson's phrase: " Making the world safe for democracy " needs to be changed to: Making the world safe for the OILGARCHY!
Thanks for this news commentary.
What a waste of blood and treasure (sigh).