COMMENT
BY Larry Ross February 14, 2004
This article is sensational . The neo-cons are in deep trouble and risk
being exposed and tried for their crimes, if this article is giving
correct data. I think it is. Justin Raimando is director of ANTIWAR,
which is a cornucopia of valuable information, which you source by clicking
on the numerous links in his article.
What might they do rather than risk being exposed and tried? They still
control the levers of power on the machinery of the most powerful state
in history.
They might decide to go for broke, rather than being exposed. To do
this they could initiate events which they used to justify stifling
of dissent and exposure of the true situation in the U.S. It could be
a new terrorist event - as fulsomely predicted by the FBI and Homeland
Security. Bush could use such an event to justify a new war. Remember
- he got about 70% public support for his illegal, war of aggressing
on Iraq which was based on deceit. Bush & Co. haven't forgotten
that this exercise worked well for them. They retained public support
even though the lies were exposed. The big lie technique worked on the
American people. Rather than being exposed, even jailed, the culprits
could reason - why not try it again and pursue their agenda -
" The Project For A New American Century" incorporating endless
wars. As well as advancing the aim of American Empire, it allows justification
for draconian laws to suppress domestic opposition and any silly laws
that stand in their way.. The neo-con administration has increasingly
high motivation to try and pull off a similar deception. Whereas Bush
seems to have lessening chances of re-election now, this might be quickly
reversed if he can again show himself as the image of a strong leader
leading a counterattack against those who have attacked America. Rally
round the flag - Onward Christian Soldiers - those that aren't with
us, are against us and with the terrorists, etc., etc. Patriotic slogans
have worked well in the past and the media happily joins in the deception
of the American people. Bush couldn't have wished for a more compliant
ally than the US media has proved to be.
Have a read and see what you think.
The War Party's Waterloo
Get out the dip
and chips, pull up a chair and let the show trial begin!
by Justin Raimondo, February 11,
2004
The
toptwo
stories on yesterday's
front page heralded an event longanticipated
in my various columns
on the subject:
the investigation into the
outing of CIA agent Valerie Plame
which may soon be dubbed Scooter-gate
is about to morph into a scandal that could bring down the roof on this
administration, and strike a knock-out blow to the War Party. .
Federal prosecutors are hot on the trail of a series of crimes that
may involve more than just the two primary suspects first
identified by
UPI's Richard Sale
Lewis
"Scooter" Libby,
the Vice President's chief of staff, and John
Hannah, the VP's Middle East policy
wonk. As the Antiwar.com staff got ready to put up Tuesday's front page,
Matt
Drudge had a lead-in to the story
that read:
"Prosecutors conduct series of meetings described as 'tense,
combative'... Armed with handwritten White House notes, detailed cell
phone logs, e-mails between presidential aides and reporters, prosecutors
demand explanations of conversations... Developing..."
Presidential aides? Libby is officially an Assistant
to the President, but the use of
the plural is & intriguing. Just how many neocons
nested in the very heart of our government
are going to be frog-marched out of the White House in handcuffs? I
sure hope they show it on television!
The trial and you can bet there's going to be one promises to be the
best show since the Watergate hearings. Time to dust off the old television,
get out the popcorn-maker, and stock up on Cheezits.
It's party time!
What we'll be celebrating, as special counsel Patrick
J. "Bulldog" Fitzgerald
prosecutes this case, is the Waterloo
of the War Party. And it is shaping up to be a real turkey shoot. Hidden
amid the inner branches of the national security bureaucracy, the beleaguered
nests of the neocons, badly shaken by the enveloping political storm,
will start dropping to the ground, and the occupants, flushed out, will
scatter, screeching in protest.
The trial of "Scooter" Libby, Hannah, and we don't know how
many others, is going to be a veritable voyage of discovery. Aside from
its sheer entertainment value, which ought to be considerable, it will
no doubt prove to be educational as well. We'll sail into the vast,
uncharted regions of the Warfare State, exploring whole continents we
never knew existed. Ah, but some of us knew&.
The propaganda campaign that led to war was conducted out of a little-known
department of the Pentagon bureaucracy, indeed one that did not exist
until the countdown to war. The Office
of Special Plans, under Defense
Undersecretary for Policy Douglas
Feith, bypassed the CIA and the
Defense Intelligence Agency, and side-stepped their Air Force counterpart,
piping a
steady diet of lies into the President's
otherwise empty head including the canard
that Saddam had plotted to procure uranium from "an African nation,"
which inexplicably wound up in the President's 2003 State of the Union
speech.
The Vice
President's office played a
key role in this operation: they
were the Praetorian
Guard that surrounded the neocon
propaganda shop: also its eyes, ears, and mouthpiece. The political
operatives handled the media, filtering the public perception of the
way decisions were being made, while the Lie
Factory worked overtime to manufacture
multiple pretexts for war. Long after it was no longer possible to shield
the deception, it was still probable that the deceivers would remain
hidden. But when they went so far as to commit a crime that could easily
be traced back to them exposing the identity of an undercover
CIA agent the War Party made a
fateful and quite possibly fatal error.
Joe
Wilson, fiercely protective of
his wife, has been all
over them, and allover
the media,
successfully taking the battle to the enemy. George
Tenet and the top CIA brass took
up his cause with alacrity, and the series
of letters sent by the CIA to the
Department of Justice underscores the persistence with which they pursued
this case. Ashcroft's
recusal was the beginning of the
end for the cabal. The appointment of Fitzgerald, whose reputation as
a dogged prosecutor is well-earned,
sealed their fate.
It is generally assumed that if charges are brought, chief among them
will be violation of the Intelligence
Identities Protection Act, which
makes the identification of an undercover agent a felony punishable
by 10 years in the slammer and a $50,000 fine. The law was designed,
in the early 1980s, specifically to go
after ex-CIA agent Philip Agee,
who made a second career out of exposing his former brethren and placing
their lives in mortal danger. That it is now being used against a rogue
clique buried deep within the recesses of the U.S. government suggests
that something a whole lot bigger is going on.
The intelligence identities bludgeon is being used to crack open a
much wider criminal enterprise,
one that subverted the intelligence process for its own ends, and, in
effect, committed espionage. What were those ends, and what motivated
the conspirators? On whose behalf did they manage to successfully divert
American power away from Al Qaeda, and toward Iraq? We're going to get
quite an education, as the trial of the neocons unfolds, and at the
end of it if we don't all have advanced degrees in Neoconology, we'll
at least be well versed in the views and loyalties
of this mystery
cult, which, for the first time
in recent years, will be given a highly visible public face by the defendants.
The political cognoscenti are well-acquainted
with the above-ground intellectual edifice of the neocon
network: centered in Washington,
this is the constellation
of all-too-familiar thinktanks and free-floating policy wonks who created
and built up the institutions that generate neoconservative theory.
The trial will give us a close look at the less visible centers of neocon
power in the government, and let us see these ideologues in action:
their underhanded methods, always teetering on the brink of legality,
as well as their foreign connections.
Since this was an international operation, involving the bamboozling
of at least three or four Western governments, the investigation is
bound to extend overseas and a
similar process is taking place
in Britain, where Tony Blair's government is in
big trouble over the war scandal.
Having fended off a preliminary skirmish over the death
of a government scientist who served
as a source for antiwar BBC broadcasts, Blair is facing yet another
round of grilling, this time over the meretricious "intelligence"
Parliament was spoon-fed by Britain's Clinton and his New Labourite
minions.
The Plame investigation raises an interesting and vital question: Why
did the Washington cabal strike out so hard at Ms. Plame and her husband?
Wilson's mission to Niger not only disproved their uranium gambit, but
also threatened to expose how the Niger uranium forgery was imported
into the intelligence stream. The Washington Post reports that
this case, too, is breaking fast and hard:
"A parallel FBI investigation into the apparent forgery of documents
suggesting that Iraq attempted to buy yellowcake uranium from Niger
is 'at a critical stage,' according to a senior law enforcement official
who declined to elaborate. That probe, conducted by FBI counterintelligence
agents, was launched last spring after U.N. officials pronounced the
documents crude forgeries.
As Joshua
Micah Marshall points out,
it was Dick Cheney who first raised the Niger uranium story in the Spring
of 2002, and a few months later presto! a batch of forged
documents showed up, just like
magic, in Italy. Elisabetta
Burba, a reporter for an Italian
glossy, Panorama, got them from "an Italian security consultant,"
and the editor of Panorama, Carlo
Rossella, instead of authorizing
a trip to Niger to investigate the matter, had Burba hand over the documents
to & the American embassy.
Why the Americans, instead of the Italian intelligence services? Panorama,
I note in passing, is owned by Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi,
a faithful supporter of Bush's war policies.
The documents were forwarded to Washington, where the CIA and other
intelligence analysts flatly pronounced them fakes. But, as Marshall
puts it, "that didn't stop their life in the U.S. national security
bureaucracy." Why not? Because the War Party needed ammunition
in their fight to take us into Iraq, and didn't mind shooting a few
blanks so long as they made a loud noise.
Take a look at this
post by Marshall to get an idea
of the exact chronology, but the timing of all this is suspiciously
serendipitous. The U.S. and the Brits, working in tandem, had launched
a major propaganda offensive at September's end, 2002, pushing claims
that Saddam was actively developing a nuclear capacity. The infamous
Blair "dossier" averred that "there is intelligence that
Iraq has sought the supply of significant quantities of uranium from
Africa."
But the BBC was already on the case, and on the receiving end of leaks
from the British intelligence community that the whole thing was a lot
of malarkey. The International Atomic Energy Authority (IAEA) took an
interest, and wanted to know what evidence the British Prime Minister
had to back up his allegation. Across the Atlantic, the CIA was fighting
off attempts by the neocons to get the nuclear claims incorporated in
the administration's talking points. The President was scheduled to
give a speech in Cincinnati, where the plan was to run the uranium-from-Africa
story up the flagpole and see if anyone saluted. The same material was
included in a top-secret National Intelligence Estimate released to
Congress in late September: the CIA's skepticism was relegated to a
few footnotes.
The CIA had clearly lost the first round, but Director Tenet hadn't
survived Washington's transition to Republican rule for nothing: he
picked up the phone and put in a call to National Security advisor Steve
Hadley and told him to delete all references to the African uranium
story from the President's speech. Hadley did so, but the African uranium
angle was too good for the War Party to pass up, and it popped up again
in yet another presidential peroration: Bush's 2003 State of the Union
speech. That the CIA is now being blamed for intelligence failures is
the height of hypocrisy on the part of the accusers.
It wasn't until a few days after the President delivered his address
that the CIA got their hands on the Niger uranium documents, which were
also turned over to the IAEA: both quickly discovered
they were forgeries, and crude ones at that.
One of the more interesting, and colorful, aspects of the intrigue surrounding
the Niger uranium story is the exact origin of these documents. Who
forged them?
Italian investigators are pursuing leads that suggest a likely source
for the required materials: a January, 2001 break-in at the Niger Embassy
in Rome, in which files were plundered, and letterhead stationary was
taken, while valuables were left undisturbed. The thieves also got away
with official seals. Months passed, and SISME, the Italian intelligence
service, found itself in possession of documents that looked authentic,
and purported to detail Saddam's efforts to procure uranium from Niger.
From SISME to Ms. Burba to the American embassy and thence on to Washington,
the trajectory of the Niger uranium story was an arrow of disinformation
aimed straight at the White House. There was only one problem: officials
who supposedly signed these documents hadn't worked for Niger's government
in years, and they referenced agencies that had long since been disbanded.
The deception was swiftly uncovered, albeit not until more objective
analysts could get a look at them.
A rogue group of U.S. government officials, in league with whomever
broke into the Niger embassy in Rome, somehow injected these bogus documents
into the intelligence stream, which then flowed directly into the President's
State of the Union. Whoever did it is guilty of much more than violating
the Intelligence Identities Protection Act. Try espionage on for size.
This is the same rogue group, operating out of the Office of Special
Plans as well as the Vice President's office, that funneled a cascading
series of lies concocted by the Iraqi National Congress, and other sources,
incorporating them into the mythology of this war. Middle East expert
Prof. Juan
Cole relates that the two suspects
so far named by Richard Sale of UPI, Lewis "Scooter" Libby
and John Hannah,
"Form part of a 13-man vice presidential advisory team, sort
of a veep NSC [National Security Council], which helps underpin Cheney's
dominance in the U.S. foreign policy area. Hannah is a neoconservative
and old cold warrior who is really more of a Soviet expert than a Middle
East expert. But in the 90s he for a while headed up the Washington
Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP), a think tank that represents
the interests of the American Israel Political Action Committee (AIPAC).
"& Hannah had fingers in all three rotten pies from which the
worst intel came Sharon's office in Israel, the Pentagon Office of Special
Plans (for which Hannah served as a liaison to Cheney), and fraudster
Ahmad Chalabi's Iraqi National Congress. Hannah had probably been the
one who fed Cheney the Niger uranium story, triggering a Cheney request
to the CIA to verify it and thence Joe Wilson's trip to Niamey in spring
of 2002, where he found the story to be an absurd falsehood on the face
of it."
As the myths of Saddam's military power are debunked, one by one,
and the case for the Iraq war collapses, the neocons' day of reckoning
is at hand. They pulled a fast one: on the President, on the country,
and on the beleaguered people of Iraq. Now they will get their comeuppance.
More than the defendants will stand trial in a Washington D.C. federal
courthouse, when the indictments come down: the rationale for war with
Iraq will be judged either innocent or guilty of deceiving the people.
The fate of the individuals involved, at that point, will become largely
irrelevant. The mere fact that they were hauled into court, along with
the nature of the charges, will be enough to discredit the war, and
make its continuation all the more intolerable.
Our constitutional republic has not endured, lo these many years, without
exercising its natural defenses. The system, challenged by neo-Jacobin
revolutionaries who seized power
in a veritable coup, reacted instinctively to preserve itself, releasing
antibodies in the form of federal prosecutors intent on destroying the
alien intruders.
The body politic, shocked by 9/11, temporarily lost its natural resistance
to incursions from the outside. The War Party took full advantage of
this vulnerability to move in and take over. With Congress, the State
Department, and the intelligence community in a depleted near-helpless
state, American foreign policy was hijacked by the neocons, along with
the nation's intelligence-gathering capabilities. The thieves might
even have gotten away with it, if not for the arrogance that comes with
the acquisition of great power. They over-reached themselves, as human
beings always do and now the real fun begins.
I keep thinking of the photo that accompanied Matt Drudge's blaring
headline about the break in this case. It was a shot of Cheney, with
the President off to the side, taken through a White House window. The
bare branches of trees and the slats of the window crisscrossed the
Vice President's image in such a way that it almost looked like a shot
taken through the barred window of a jail cell.
Justin Raimondo