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Weird Men?
Sparrow
04/09/03 at 19:47:06
Thought this was interesting.  Maybe some folks can take a break from insulting each other and have a read :P

THE WEIRD MEN BEHIND GEORGE W.'s WAR
 
 Michael Lind in The New Statesman
 (UK) Monday 7th April 2003
 
Imagine a new British invasion of Egypt orchestrated by the  followers of Ian
Paisley, and you will have some idea of what is happening in Washington - 
Michael Lind dissects a neo-conservative coup.
 
America's allies and enemies alike are baffled. What is going on in the
United States? Who is making foreign policy? And what are they trying to
achieve? Quasi-Marxist explanations involving big oil or American capitalism
are mistaken. Yes, American oil companies and contractors will accept the
spoils of the kill in Iraq. But the oil business, with its Arabist bias, did
not push for this war any more than it supports the Bush administration's
close alliance with Ariel Sharon.  Further, President Bush and Vice-President
Cheney are not genuine "Texas oil men" but career politicians who,  in
between stints in public life, would have used their connections to enrich
themselves as figureheads in the wheat business, if they had been residents
of Kansas, or in tech companies, had they been Californians.
>
Equally wrong is the theory that American and European civilization are 
evolving in opposite directions.  The thesis of Robert Kagan, the
neo-conservative propagandist,  that Americans are martial and Europeans
pacifist, is complete nonsense. A majority of Americans voted for  either Al
Gore or Ralph Nader in 2000. Were it not for the over-representation of
sparsely populated, right-wing states in both the presidential electoral
college and the Senate, the White House and the Senate today would be
controlled by Democrats, whose views and values, on everything from war to
the welfare state, are very close to those of western Europeans.
>
> Both the economic-determinist and the clash-of-cultures theory are
reassuring: they assume that the recent revolution in US foreign policy is
the result of obscure but understandable forces in an orderly world. The
truth is more alarming. As a  result of several bizarre and unforeseeable
contingencies - such as the selection rather than election of George W Bush,
and 11 September - the foreign policy of the world's only global power is
being made by a small clique that is unrepresentative of either the US
population or the mainstream foreign policy establishment.
>
The core group now in charge consists of neo-conservative defence
intellectuals (they are called "neo-conservatives" because many of them
started off as anti-Stalinist leftists or liberals before moving to the far
right). Inside the government, the chief defence intellectuals include Paul
Wolfowitz, the deputy secretary of defence. He is the defence mastermind of
the Bush administration; Donald Rumsfeld is an elderly figurehead who holds
the position of defence secretary only because Wolfowitz himself is too
controversial. Others include Douglas Feith, the number three at the
Pentagon; Lewis "Scooter" Libby, a Wolfowitz protege who is Cheney's chief of
staff; John R Bolton, a right-winger assigned to the State Department to keep
Colin Powell in check; and Elliott Abrams, recently appointed to head Middle
East policy at the National Security Council. On the  outside are James
Woolsey, the former CIA director, who has tried repeatedly to link both 9/11
and the anthrax letters in the US to Saddam Hussein, and Richard Perle, who
has just resigned from his unpaid defence department advisory post after a
lobbying scandal. Most of these "experts" never served in the military. But
their headquarters is now the civilian defence secretary's office, where
these Republican political appointees are despised
and distrusted by the largely Republican career soldiers.
>
Most neo-conservative defence intellectuals have their roots on the left, not
the right. They are products of  the largely Jewish-American Trotskyist
movement of the 1930s and 1940s, which morphed into anti-communist liberalism
between the 1950s and 1970s and finally into a kind of militaristic and
imperial right with no precedents in American culture or political history.
Their admiration for the Israeli Likud party's tactics, including preventive
warfare such Israel's 1981 raid on Iraq's Osirak nuclear reactor, is mixed
with odd bursts of ideological enthusiasm for "democracy". They call their
revolutionary ideology "Wilsonianism" (after President Woodrow Wilson), but
it is really Trotsky's theory of the permanent revolution mingled with the
far-right Likud strain of Zionism. Genuine American Wilsonians believe in
self-determination for people such as the Palestinians.
>
The neo-con defence intellectuals, as well as being in or around the actual
Pentagon, are at the centre of a metaphorical "pentagon" of the Israel lobby
and the religious right, plus conservative think-tanks, foundations and media
empires. Think-tanks such as the American Enterprise Institute (AEI)  and the
Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS)  provide homes for
neo-con "in-and-outers" when
they are out of government (Perle  is a fellow at AEI). The money comes not
so much from corporations as from decades-old conservative foundations, such
as the Bradley and Olin foundations, which spend down the estates of
long-dead tycoons.
Neo-conservative foreign policy does not reflect business interests in any
direct way. The neo-cons are ideologues, not opportunists.
>
The major link between the conservative think-tanks and the Israel lobby is
the Washington-based and Likud-supporting Jewish Institute for National
Security Affairs (Jinsa), which co-opts many non-Jewish defence experts by
sending them on trips to Israel.  It flew out the retired General Jay Garner,
now slated by Bush to be proconsul of occupied Iraq. In October 2000, he
co-signed a Jinsa letter that began: "We . . . believe that during the
current upheavals in Israel, the Israel Defence Forces have exercised
remarkable restraint in the face of lethal violence orchestrated by the
leadership of [the] Palestinian Authority."
>
The Israel lobby itself is divided into Jewish and Christian wings. Wolfowitz
and Feith have close ties to the Jewish-American> Israel lobby.  Wolfowitz,
who has relatives in Israel, has served as the Bush administration's liaison
to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. Feith was given an award by
the Zionist Organization of America, citing him as a "pro-Israel activist".
While out of power in the Clinton years, Feith collaborating with Perle,
co-authored for Likud a policy paper that advised the Israeli government to
end the Oslo peace process, reoccupy the territories and crush Yasser
Arafat's government.
>
Such experts are not typical of Jewish-Americans, who mostly voted for Gore
in 2000. The most fervent supporters of Likud in the Republican electorate
are southern Protestant fundamentalists. The religious right believes that
God gave all of Palestine to the Jews, and fundamentalist congregations spend
millions to subsidise Jewish settlements in the occupied territories.
>
The final corner of the neo-conservative pentagon is occupied by several
right-wing media empires, with roots - odd as it seems - in the Commonwealth
and South Korea. Rupert Murdoch disseminates propaganda through his Fox
Television network. His magazine the Weekly Standard, edited by William
Kristol, the former chief of staff of Dan Quayle (vice-president, 1989-93),
acts as a mouthpiece for defence intellectuals such as Perle,  Wolfowitz,
Feith and Woolsey as well as for
Sharon's government. The National Interest (of which I was executive editor,
1991-94) is now funded by Conrad Black, who owns the Jerusalem Post and the
Hollinger empire in Britain and Canada.
>
Strangest of all is the media network centred on the Washington Times - both
owned by the South Korean messiah (and ex-convict) the Reverend Sun Myung
Moon - which owns the newswire UPI. UPI is now run by John O'Sullivan, the
ghost-writer for Margaret Thatcher who once worked as an editor for Conrad 
Black in Canada. Through such channels, the "Gotcha!" style of  right-wing
British journalism, as well as its Europhobic substance, have contaminated
the US conservative movement.
>
The corners of the neo-conservative pentagon were linked together in the
1990s by the Project for the New American Century (PNAC), run by Kristol out
of the Weekly Standard offices. Using a PR technique pioneered by their
Trotskyist predecessors, the neo-cons published a series of  public letters,
whose signatories often included
Wolfowitz and other future members of the Bush foreign policy team. They
called for the US to invade and occupy Iraq and to support Israel's campaigns
against the Palestinians (dire warnings about China were another favourite).
During Clinton's two
terms, these fulminations were ignored by the foreign policy establishment
and the mainstream media. Now they are frantically being studied.
>
How did the neo-con defence intellectuals - a small group at odds with most
of the US foreign policy elite, Republican as well as Democratic  - manage to
capture the Bush administration?  Few supported Bush during the presidential
primaries. They feared that the second Bush would be like the first - a wimp
who had failed to occupy Baghdad in the first Gulf war and who had pressured
Israel into the Oslo peace
process - and that his administration, again like his father's, would be
dominated by moderate Republican realists such as Powell, James Baker and
Brent Scowcroft. They supported the maverick senator John McCain until it
became clear that Bush would get the nomination.
>
Then they had a stroke of luck - Cheney was put in charge of the presidential
transition (the period between the election in November and the accession to
office in January). Cheney used this opportunity to stack the administration
with his hardline
allies. Instead of becoming the de facto president in foreign policy, as>
many had expected, Secretary of State Powell found himself boxed in by
Cheney's right-wing network, including Wolfowitz,  Perle, Feith, Bolton and
Libby.
>
The neo-cons took advantage of  Bush's ignorance and inexperience. Unlike his
father, a Second World War veteran who had been ambassador to China, director
of the CIA and vice-president, George W was a thinly educated playboy who had
failed repeatedly in business before becoming the governor of Texas, a
largely ceremonial
position (the state's lieutenant governor has more power). His father is
essentially a north-eastern, moderate Republican; George W, raised in west
Texas,  absorbed the Texan cultural combination of machismo,
anti-intellectualism and overt religiosity. The son of upper-class
Episcopalian parents, he converted to southern
fundamentalism in a midlife crisis. Fervent Christian Zionism, along with an
admiration for macho Israeli soldiers that sometimes coexists with hostility
to
liberal Jewish-American intellectuals, is a feature of the southern culture.
>
The younger Bush was tilting away from Powell and toward Wolfowitz ("Wolfie",
as he calls him) even before 9/11 gave him something he had lacked: a mission
in life other than following in his dad's footsteps. There are signs of
estrangement between
the cautious father and the crusading son: last year, veterans of the first
Bush administration, including Baker, Scowcroft and Lawrence Eagleburger,
warned publicly against an invasion of  Iraq without authorisation from
Congress and the UN.
>
It is not clear that George W fully understands the grand strategy that
Wolfowitz and other aides are unfolding. He seems genuinely to believe that
there was an imminent threat to the US from Saddam Hussein's "weapons of mass
destruction", something the leading neo-cons say in public but are far too
intelligent to believe themselves. The Project for the New American Century
urged an invasion of Iraq throughout the Clinton years, for reasons that had
nothing to do with possible links between Saddam and Osama Bin Laden. Public
letters signed by Wolfowitz and others called on the US to invade and occupy
Iraq, to bomb Hezbollah bases in Lebanon and to
threaten states such as Syria and Iran with US attacks if they continued to
sponsor terrorism. Claims that the purpose is not to protect the American
people but to make the Middle East safe for Israel are dismissed by the
neo-cons as vicious anti-Semitism. Yet Syria, Iran and Iraq are bitter
enemies, with  their weapons pointed at each other, and the terrorists they
sponsor target Israel rather than the US. The
neo-cons urge war with Iran next, though by any rational measurement North
Korea's new nuclear arsenal is, for the US, a far greater problem.
>
So that is the bizarre story of  how neo-conservatives took over Washington
and steered the US into a Middle Eastern war unrelated to any plausible
threat to the US and opposed by the public of every country in the world
except Israel. The frightening
thing is the role of happenstance and personality. After the al-Qaeda
attacks, any US president would likely have  gone to war to topple Bin
Laden's Taliban protectors in Afghanistan. But everything that the US has
done since then would have been
different had America's 18th-century electoral rules not given Bush the
presidency and had Cheney not used the transition period to turn the foreign
policy executive into a PNAC reunion.
>
For a British equivalent, one  would have to imagine a Tory government, with
Downing Street and Whitehall controlled by followers of  Reverend Ian
Paisley, extreme Eurosceptics, empire loyalists and Blimpish military types -
all determined, for a variety of strategic or religious reasons, to invade
Egypt. Their aim would be to regain the Suez Canal as the first step in a
campaign to restore the British empire. Yes, it really is that weird.
>
Michael Lind, the Whitehead Fellow at the New America Foundation in
Washington, DC, is the author of  Made in Texas: George W Bush and  the
southern takeover of American politics.


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