By Ismael Hossein-Zadeh,
Drake University (Economics),
ismael.zadeh@drake.edu
http://www.drake.edu/cbpa/econ/hossein-zadeh/
Under the
influence of a cabal of the so-called neoconservatives, the Bush Administration
has turned our world into an unsafe, uncertain, and worrisome place. The Administration no longer disguises
its intentions that the war in Iraq was only one step in its ambitious project
to recast the geopolitical landscape of the Middle East—and perhaps beyond. Not only has this created insecurity and
turbulence in the Middle East, it has also thrown most of the post-WW II
international alliances, treaties, and institutions into disarray and
confusion.
The
relentless mobilization for war and militarism has also contributed to the
undermining of both civil liberties and economic conditions of the overwhelming
majority of the American people.
While arms manufacturers are showered with massive amounts of tax
dollars, nothing effective is done to stem the rising tide of unemployment and
economic insecurity for the poor and working people. The disproportionate allocation of
resources in favor of arms industries is directly contributing to the
undermining of both physical infrastructure (such as roads, bridges and ports)
and soft/social infrastructure such as healthcare, education, and
nutrition. Under a carefully
orchestrated war atmosphere, and under the guise of a fiscal stimulus package, a
huge capital-friendly tax cut is proposed that will drastically redistribute
national income/resources in favor of the wealthy. Millions of Americans have witnessed
their retirement savings disappear by the bear and corrupt market, and more than
a million filed for bankruptcy last year alone. Unsurprisingly, then, despite
the somewhat artificial and somewhat coerced patriotism, many Americans are
worried about their economic situation and, like many people in other parts of
the world, anxious about international relations and world peace and
stability.
What makes
the foreign policy projections of the Bush Administration’s team of
neoconservatives dangerous to world peace is their self-righteous sense of being
on a mission and, hence, their impatience in dealing with complex situations and
their intolerance for discussion, debate, and dissent. In the face of complex
foreign policy issues, requiring patient and intelligent consultation and
debate, they tend to opt for preemptive/adventurous shortcuts. This strategy of
Washington’s war-making cabal of neoconservatives in constantly contriving new
external enemies seems to be derived from the political philosophy of H. L.
Mencken who maintained: "The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the
populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with
an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary."[i]
Thus, for
example, in the face of legitimate questions about the alleged existence of
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, they hurriedly invaded the country in an
attempt to preempt further questions and/or a national debate on the issue.
Likewise, in the wake of death and destruction in Iraq, and in the face of
mounting economic problems at home, they are talking about waging war against
Iran, Syria, and other countries.
The Administration’s war juggernaut seems to be following the logic of
the proverbial bicyclist who has to keep riding forward or else he will fall
over. This has meant, as the
Administration’s record shows, embarking on new adventures and creating new
problems as a way of dealing with the existing/old ones!
The question
is why? What lies behind the
Administration’s tendency toward a permanent state of war--pursued in the name
of “preemption,” “regime change,” and “war on terrorism”?
Official
explanations such as weapons of mass destruction, Saddam’s threat to the United
States, or his connection to Al Qaede, can now easily be dispensed with as
flimsy, harebrained pretexts for the invasion of Iraq.
Critics have
pointed to a number of driving forces/factors to war. An obvious factor is said to be the
President’s political need to maintain his 9/11-induced strong status as
Commander-in-Chief, and his need for re-election on security/defense
grounds. A second hypothesis
attributes the Administration’s drive to war to its desire to divert attention
from corporate scandal and economic recession. Expansion of the American empire is
offered as a third explanation.
Control of the major sources of oil constitutes a widely cited fourth
factor in the administration's drive to war.
Whatever the
contributory impact of these factors, they are not, in my view, the major
driving forces behind the Administrations war machine. The Administration’s war juggernaut,
rather, seems to be driven by an alliance/axis of two other forces: The Military-Industrial Complex and the
hard-line Zionist proponents of a Jewish state in the “Greater Israel,” or the
“Promised Land.”[ii] As I shall explain shortly, both of these forces perceive their interests better served
by fomenting war and tension in the Middle East region. It is this convergence of interests on
war and convulsion in the region that lies behind the current alliance of these
two powerful forces—the title of this essay, “The Axis of War and Mischief in
the Middle East,” refers to this alliance.
The
Alliance is represented by a cabal of closely connected individuals who are
firmly ensconced in the Pentagon. They also hold powerful positions within the
National Security Council, the White House, the Congress and, to a lesser
extent, the State Department. Not all the members of the Cabal hold official
positions in the government apparatus. They also work within and through various
lobbying think tanks, unofficial interest groups, consulting/research
institutes, and the media.
Some of the
well-known figures of the Cabal are: Donald Rumsfeld (Secretary of Defense),
Paul
Wolfowitz (Under Secretary of Defense), Richard Cheney (Vice President), Richard Perle (Defense Policy Board), Douglas Feith
(Defense Dept.), James Woolsey (former Director of
Central Intelligence), David Wurmser (State Dept.), William Kristol
(Editor, the Weekly Standard), Michael Ladeen (Oliver North's Iran/contra liaison with the
Israelis), Eliot Abrams (National Security Council), Lewis Libby (Vice
President Cheney’s Chief of Staff), Fred Ikle
(Defense Policy Board), Zalmay Khalilzad (White House), David Wurmser (State
Department), Dov Zakheim (Defense Department), Peter Rodman (Defense
Department), Richard Armitage (State Department), Norman Podhoretz
(well-known doyen of the neoconservatives), David Frum (President Bush’s
Speechwriter), John Bolton (State Department), Frank
Gaffney (Director, Center for Security Policy), Joshua Muravchik (American
Enterprise Institute), Martin Peretz (editor-in-chief, The New Republic),
Leon Wieseltier (The New Republic), and former Rep. Stephen Solarz
(D-N.Y.).
The number
of the publicly known think tanks through which the Alliance operate include The
American Enterprise Institute (AEI), Project for the New American Century
(PNAC), Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI),
Hudson Institute, Washington Institute for Near East Policy, Middle East Forum,
Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs (JINSA), and Center for Security
Policy (CSP).
Some of the
well-known publications that support, formulate, and propagate the views of the
Cabal are: the Weekly
Standard, the New
Republic, the Wall Street Journal, National Review, and the
Washington Times.
The Role of
the Military-Industrial Complex
Because I
have dealt with the role of the Military-Industrial Complex in the Bush
Administration’s drive to war in an earlier article, I shall be brief here .[iii] The theory behind the
military industries’ tendency to war is straightforward: peace is simply not
good for the business of these industries.
War, by contrast, means good business; not only in terms of production
and/or sales in general but also in terms of the industry’s appropriation of a
big chunk of the nation’s tax dollars.[iv] President Eisenhower's warning near the
end of his second term against the potential dangers of the Military-Industrial
Complex seems to have been prompted largely by this intrinsic tendency of the
Complex towards war and militarism.
Of course,
tendencies to build bureaucratic empires have always existed in the ranks of
military hierarchies. By itself, this is not what makes the U.S.
Military-Industrial Complex more dangerous than the military powers of the past
empires. What makes it more dangerous is the “Industrial” part of the Complex.
In contrast to the United States' military industry, arms industries of the past
empires were not subject to capitalist market imperatives. Furthermore, those
industries were often owned and operated by imperial governments, not by
market-driven private corporations. Consequently, as a rule, arms production was
dictated by war requirements, not by market or profit imperatives, which is
often the case with today’s U.S. arms industry. The fact that powerful interests within
the Military-Industrial Complex derive “war dividends” from international
conflicts explains why representatives of the Complex have almost always reacted
negatively to discussions of international cooperation and détente (tension
reduction).
Thus, for
example, in the late 1940s and early1950s, the Korean War and the “communist
threat” were used as pretexts by the proponents of military buildup to overrule
those who called for limits on military spending following the end of the World
War. Representatives of the Military-Industrial Complex, disproportionately
ensconced in the State and Defense Departments, succeeded in having President
Truman embark on his famous overhaul of the U.S. foreign policy, which
drastically increased the Pentagon budget and expanded the military-industrial
establishment.
Likewise, in
the face of the 1970s' tension-reducing negotiations with the Soviet Union,
representatives of the Complex rallied around Cold Warrior think tanks such as
the “Committee on the Present Danger” and successfully sabotaged those
discussions. Instead, once again, by invoking the red scare, they managed to
reinforce the relatively weakened tensions with the Soviet Union to such new
heights that it came to be known as the Second Cold War—hence, the early 1980s'
dramatic “rearming of America,” as President Reagan put it.
Similarly,
when the collapse of the Soviet system and the subsequent discussions of “peace
dividends” in the United States threatened the interests of the
Military-Industrial Complex, representatives of the Complex invented the “threat
of rogue states to our national interests,” and successfully substituted it for
the “threat of communism” of the Cold War era—thereby, once again, averted
efforts at cutting the military spending.
Indeed, proponents of military buildup did more than just coin the term
“rogue states.” They also moved
swiftly to foment regional tensions and instigate certain states to react in a
manner that would make the application of the term “rogue” to such states
plausible. Saddam Hussein, the
Iraqi dictator, was the first to fall into this trap.
There
is evidence that the Bush (Sr.) Administration’s policy was to lead Saddam
Hussein to believe that he could take over Kuwait with impunity. The purpose was
to give him enough maneuvering space to cause a regional crisis, which would
serve as a substitute for the waning “Soviet threat to US interests.” This new
“threat,” in turn, would provide a new rationale for continued expansion of the
Pentagon budget.[v]
Thus,
long before the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon,
beneficiaries of war dividends were searching for “rogue states” and other
pretexts to justify and further expand the Pentagon budget. The needs of these beneficiaries of “war
dividends” for international convulsions helps explain why they viewed the 9/11
tragedy as an opportunity for remilitarization. The monstrous attacks of 9/11
were treated not as crimes—as they actually were—but as war on America. Once it
was thus established that the United States was “at war,” military buildup
followed logically.
What
is more, President Bush and his circle of war-making advisors have made their
declared war on terrorism open-ended and permanent. It is open-ended because the
President’s close advisors seems to have no difficulty finding terrorism by
definition; that is, “by deciding unilaterally what actions around the world
constitute terrorism,” or by arbitrarily classifying certain countries as
“supporters of terrorism,” as Bill Christison, retired CIA advisor, put it.[vi] Justification of war has never been made
so simple: it does not seem to require more than the mere fancy of the
beneficiaries of “war dividends.”
The
Role of Hard-line Zionism
Just
as the beneficiaries of war dividends view international peace and stability
inimical to their interests, so too the hard-line Zionists perceive peace
between Israel and its Arab neighbors perilous to their goal of gaining control
over the promised “Land of Israel.”
The reason for this fear of peace is that, according to a number of the
United Nations’ resolutions, peace would mean Israel’s return to its pre-1967
borders; that is, withdrawal from the West Bank and Gaza Strip. But because proponents of greater Israel
are unwilling to withdraw from these territories, they are therefore afraid of
peace—hence, their continued efforts at sabotaging peace negotiations, including
the heinous crime of assassinating the late Prime Minister Yitzach Rabin for
having signed the Oslo Peace Accord with Palestinians. By the same token, these
proponents view war and convulsion (or, as David Ben-Gurion, one of the key
founders of the State of Israel, put it, “revolutionary atmosphere”) as
opportunities that are conducive to the expulsion of Palestinians, to the
territorial recasting of the region, and to the expansion of Israel’s
territory.
This
judgment is based neither on theory, nor on conjecture, nor on simple logic. It
is based on the well-known Zionist philosophy of establishing a Jewish state in
the “Promised Land.” It is also
based on the actual policies and practices of the leaders of the State of Israel
ever since it was founded in 1948.
According to that philosophy, conceived and formulated by the pioneers of
modern Zionism in the late 19th century, institution of the State of
Israel must be based on overwhelmingly (if not homogeneously) Jewish
population. Despite the occasional
public rhetoric to the contrary,
The idea
of transfer [of Palestinians from their land] had accompanied the Zionist
movement from its very beginnings, first appearing in Theodore Herzl's diary. In
practice, the Zionists began executing a mini-transfer from the time they began
purchasing the land and evacuating the Arab tenants.... "Disappearing" the Arabs
lay at the heart of the Zionist dream, and was also a necessary condition of its
existence.... With few exceptions, none of the Zionists disputed the
desirability of forced transfer—or its morality.[vii]
Because
the overwhelming majority of the inhabitants of Palestine were not Jewish but
Muslim and Christian Arabs, the question that faced the planners of a Jewish
state in Palestine was, therefore, how to bring about the “necessary” expulsion
of Palestinians from their land.
Obviously, such expulsions could not be brought about during normal,
peaceful times; war and application of force were deemed necessary for the
projected expulsions. But because
waging war and applying force in the name of expulsions would be politically
incorrect, instigation of diversionary/proxy wars in the region were considered
necessary in order to avail the expansionist Zionist forces of the needed
pretext for the projected expulsions.
David Ben-Gurion explained the importance of the convulsive social
circumstances to the objective of expelling the Palestinians and expanding the
Jewish territory in these words: "What is
inconceivable in normal times is possible in revolutionary times; and if at this
time the opportunity is missed and what is possible in such great hours is not
carried out — a whole world is lost."[viii]
The
actual measures that were adopted for the creation of the Jewish State followed
this strategy as squarely as a theatrical play following a script. Once the
Zionist forces gained a foothold in Palestine as a result of Britain’s issuance
of the Balfour Declaration, they embarked on a path of territorial expansion
that led to the 1948 war under whose cover they managed to expel 750,000
Palestinians (more than 80 percent of the indigenous population), and thus
achieve an overwhelmingly Jewish state.”[ix]
But
while the Jewish State that was thus created achieved the objective
of
“overwhelmingly Jewish population,” it fell short of achieving the second major
goal of Zionist planners: capturing the entire Palestine, the “Land of Israel,”
from Jordan to the Mediterranean.
It remained for another war, the 1967 war, to gain control of additional
land, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
Occupation of additional land, however, could not this time be
accompanied by the expulsion of its inhabitants. Additional territory, therefore, also
meant an additional dilemma: the so-called “demographic problem.” The founders of the Jewish State viewed
the non-Jewish inhabitants of the occupied territories, combined with their
higher rates of population growth, as a long-term threat to the ideal of
“overwhelmingly Jewish state of Israel.”
Years of
wrenching debate over how to resolve this “dilemma” led (by the 1980s) to a
major fissure in the ranks of the Israeli leaders. The realist faction, headed by the Late
Prime Minister Yitzach Rabin and his co-thinkers, gradually became convinced
that the goal of capturing the entire Palestine based on the overwhelmingly
Jewish population was unattainable; and that the time had arrived for Israel to
consider the “land-for-security” proposals, along with the underlying ideas of
two independent, side-by-side states of Israel and Palestine. This line of
thinking eventually became the basis for the so-called Oslo Peace Accord between
the Palestinians and the Israelis.
The
hard-line proponents of “Greater Israel” such as Ariel Sharon and Benjamin
Natanyahu, by contrast, insisted on re-doubling the “necessary” efforts to
achieve the goal of capturing the “Land of Israel,” including new expulsions
from the occupied territories. They
acknowledged that, for the time being, certain conditions (such the important
friendly relations between the Unites State and a number of Arab states, the
large Palestinian population in the occupied territories, and the world public
opinion) were not favorable to achieving this goal. But they argued that some of those
conditions can be changed, including geographic boundaries and territorial
configurations of a number of countries in the region. Specifically, the hard-liners
called
for Israel to bring about the dissolution and fragmentation of the Arab states
into a mosaic of ethnic groupings. Thinking along those lines, Ariel Sharon
stated on March 24, 1988, that if the Palestinian uprising continued, Israel
would have to make war on her Arab neighbors. The war, he stated, would provide
"the circumstances" for the removal of the entire Palestinian population from
the West Bank and Gaza and even from inside Israel proper.[x]
Ariel
Sharon’s idea of war “providing the circumstances” for the removal of the
Palestinian people is an unmistakable revival of David Ben-Gurion’s view (quoted
earlier) that
“revolutionary times” provide opportunities for the expulsion of Palestinians—an
idea that lies at the heart of the hard-line Zionists’ goal of establishing a
Jewish state in the “Land of Israel.”
The idea that war would “provide the circumstances” for the removal of
Palestinians from the occupied territories was, of course, premised on the
expectation that the United States would go along with the idea and support
Zionist expansionism in the event of the contemplated war.
But
as long as the Soviet Union existed as the countervailing world power to the
United States, this expectation was unrealistic. Under the bipolar world of the Cold War
era, where the world in general and the Middle East region in particular, were
divided into East-West blocs of influence, the United States simply would not
abandon or antagonize its Arab/Muslim allies in the region by supporting the
Zionist plan of another overhaul of the geography of the region. The collapse of
the Soviet Union, however, removed a major obstacle to the fulfillment of that
plan.
The
Demise of the Soviet Union, the Convergence of Interests on War, and the Unholy
Alliance
In
pursuit of their goal of establishing a Jewish state in the “Land of Israel,”
the Zionist leaders have always tried to portray their interests as coinciding
with those of the United States. By the same token, they have also always tried
to portray the opponents of their expansionist policies as enemies of the United
States. But, as just noted, such attempts at manipulation were not very
effective during the Cold War atmosphere.
In the aftermath of the Cold War era, however, those schemes began to
become more effective; not because the Zionist strategists suddenly became
smarter, or the U.S. policy makers in the region suddenly became more
susceptible to Zionist influence.
But because the interests of those policy makers (especially the
interests of the Military-Industrial Complex) now converged with those of the
hard-line Zionists in instigating war and convulsion in the region.[xi]
As
noted earlier, the demise of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War
prompted calls in the United States for “peace dividends,” that is, for the
curtailment and conversion of part of the military budget to civilian use. The idea behind the calls for “peace
dividends” was simple: since in the aftermath of the collapse of the Soviet
Union the U.S. no longer needed the colossal military apparatus of the Cold War
era, part of the military budget could now safely be reallocated toward civilian
uses. Frightened by the specter of
peace and/or peace dividends, beneficiaries of military spending frantically
sought to produce new bogies to replace the “communist threat,” thereby
preempting the realization of peace dividends.
In
their search for substitutes for the Soviet threat of the Cold War era,
proponents of militarism found a strong, well-established network of politically
savvy allies: militant Zionists.
Because the interests of these two powerful groups converged over
fomenting war and convulsion in the Middle East, an ominously potent alliance
was forged between them—ominous, because the mighty U.S. war machine was now
supplemented by the unrivaled public relations capabilities of Zionism.[xii] The hawkish war mongers in and around
the Bush Administration who have come to be known as neoconservatives serve the
interests of this alliance. “Rogue
states,” “war on terrorism,” and “pre-emptive regime change,” have been some of
the politically useful products of the creative minds of the spin-doctors of the
Alliance.
Not
surprisingly, soon after the demise of the Soviet Union, representatives of the
Alliance embarked on a joint offensive against a whole host of long-established
international institutions and conventions, arms control treaties and, most
importantly, the Oslo peace negotiations between the Palestinians and the
Israelis. Instead of those long-established multilateral treaties and
conventions, they now called for American unilateralism and/or militarism, along
with an overhaul of the geopolitical landscape of the Middle East—an overhaul
that, as Ariel Sharon put it, would eliminate the opponents of Israel’s policies
in the region and provide “the circumstances” for the expulsion of Palestinians
(quoted earlier).
The
Alliance promotes its views and plans through an extended but tightly knit Web
of interlocking and/or overlapping network of influential think-tanks and
lobbying entities. They include the
American Enterprise Institute (AEI), Middle East Media Research Institute
(MEMRI), Hudson Institute, Washington Institute for Near East Policy, Middle
East Forum, Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs (JINSA), and Center
for Security Policy (CSP).
Some of
these lobbying think tanks and their major political players have direct Israeli
connections. For example, Colonel Yigal Carmon, formerly of Israeli military
intelligence, was a co-founder of the MEMRI. The other co-founder of MEMRI, Meyrav
Wurmser, was a member of the Hudson Institute, while her husband, David Wurmser,
headed the Middle East Studies Department of the American Enterprise Institute.
Richard Perle, a major player in the neoconservative movement, was both a
"resident fellow" at the American Enterprise Institute and a trustee of the
Hudson Institute.[xiii] Focusing on two of these influential
think-tanks, JINSA and CPS, Jason Vest (reporting for The Nation)
effectively unmasks “the close links among the two organizations, right-wing
politicians, arms merchants, military men, Jewish billionaires, and Republican
administrations.”[xiv]
In the
immediate aftermath of the Cold War era, these think-tanks and their
neo-conservative spin-doctors published a number of policy papers which clearly
and forcefully advocated plans for border change, demographic change, and regime
change in the Middle East. For
example, in 1996 an influential Israeli think tank, Institute for Advanced
Strategic and Political Studies, sponsored and published a policy document,
titled “A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm,” which argued that
the Netanyahu government
should
"make a clean break" with the Oslo peace process and reassert Israel's claim to
the West Bank and Gaza. It presented a plan whereby Israel would "shape its
strategic environment," beginning with the removal of Saddam Hussein and the
installation of a Hashemite monarchy in Baghdad, to serve as a first step toward
eliminating the anti-Israeli governments of Syria, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, and
Iran.[xv]
The
document, intended as a political roadmap for the incoming government of
Benjamin Netanyahu, was prepared by a “Study Group” which included Richard Perle
(American Enterprise Institute, Study Group Leader), James Colbert (Jewish
Institute for National Security Affairs), Douglas Feith (Feith and Zell
Associates), Robert Loewenberg (President, Institute for Advanced Strategic and
Political Studies), David Wurmser (Institute for Advanced Strategic and
Political Studies), and Meyrav Wurmser (Johns Hopkins University). The dual role that a number of these
individuals play is remarkable:
serving as advisor both to the Likud party/government and to President
Bush’s Administration (Perle is now a member of the Defense Policy Board; Feith
is an Assistant Secretary of Defense; and Wurmser is special assistant to State
Department chief arms control negotiator John Bolton.)
In an
“Open Letter to the President” (Clinton), dated 19 February1998, a number of
these lobbyists, along with a number of their cohorts in the Committee for Peace
and Security in the Gulf, recommended “a comprehensive political and military
strategy for bringing down Saddam and his regime.” The letter further proposed: "It will
not be easy — and the course of action we favor is not without its problems and
perils. But we believe the vital national interests of our country require the
United States to [adopt such a strategy]."
Among
the letter's signers were the following current Bush administration officials
and their cohorts: Elliott Abrams (National Security Council), Richard Armitage
(State Department), John Bolton (State Department), Douglas Feith (Defense
Department), Fred Ikle (Defense Policy Board), Zalmay Khalilzad (White House),
Peter Rodman (Defense Department), Paul Wolfowitz (Defense Department), David
Wurmser (State Department), Dov Zakheim (Defense Department), Richard Perle
(Defense Policy Board), Donald Rumsfeld (Secretary of Defense), William Kristol
(editor, the Weekly Standard, Frank Gaffney (Director, Center for
Security Policy), Joshua Muravchik (American Enterprise Institute), Martin
Peretz (editor-in-chief, The New Republic), Leon Wieseltier (The New
Republic), and former Rep. Stephen Solarz (D-N.Y.).[xvi]
Similarities
between the recommendations made in this 1998 letter to President Clinton and
those made in the 1996 report to the Likud party/government of Benjamin
Netanyahu are unmistakable. The only difference is that whereas the 1996 report
stressed the “national interests” of Israel the 1998 letter stressed the
“national interests” of the United States.[xvii] This is an indication of the fact that
the loyalties of a number of the key handlers of the U.S. foreign policy are
woefully divided. Unsurprisingly,
many of these neoconservative political players have come to be “called in
diplomatic and political circles the ‘Israeli-firsters,’ meaning that they would
always put Israeli policy, or even their perception of it, above anything
else.”[xviii]
In
September 2000, another think-tank of the war mongering cabal of
neoconservatives, Project for the New American Century (PNAC), issued a report,
"Rebuilding America's Defenses: Strategy, Forces and Resources for a New
Century," which explicitly projected an imperial role for the United States the
world over. The report specifically
proposed an expanded U.S. presence in the Middle East region, using the claims
against Saddam Hussein’s regime as a pretext: "the United States has for decades
sought to play a more permanent role in Gulf regional security. While the
unresolved conflict with Iraq provides the immediate justification, the need for
a substantial American force presence in the Gulf transcends the issue of the
regime of Saddam Hussein." The
sponsors of the report included Richard Cheney (Vice President), Donald Rumsfeld
(secretary of defense), Paul Wolfowitz (deputy secretary of defense), and Lewis
Libby (Cheney's chief of staff). William Kristol, editor of the Weekly
Standard, was also a co-author of the report.[xix]
This
sample evidence clearly shows that the Military-Industrial-Zionist alliance had
intended to invade Iraq and recast the geopolitical landscape of the Middle East
long before the 9/11 atrocities.
Indeed, evidence indicates that, aside from its triggering effect, those
atrocities had very little to do with such plans. The Cabal of neoconservative war
mongers, as shown above, had drawn such plans long before the 9/11 attacks. But they needed pretexts and
opportunities for carrying out their plans. The 9/11 atrocities provided just such
an opportunity. On the one hand,
the attacks provided U.S. arms industries with the substitute they were seeking
for the Soviet threat in the aftermath of the Cold War in order to justify the
rising Pentagon spending. On the other hand, they provided militant Zionism with
the convulsive circumstances that would avail them of the opportunities to carry
out their expulsion and settlement plans. Furthermore, as Stephen J. Sniegoski,
points out:
In the
eyes of Israel's leaders, the September 11 attacks had joined the United States
and Israel together against a common enemy. And that enemy was not in far-off
Afghanistan but was geographically close to Israel. Israel's traditional enemies
would now become America's as well. And Israel would have a better chance of
dealing with the Palestinians under the cover of a "war on terrorism."[xx]
Not
surprisingly, immediately after the 9/11 attacks, representatives of the
Military-Industrial-Zionist alliance began calling for war not just against
Osama Bin Laden and/or Al Qaede but also against a number of countries that
allegedly supported or harbored terrorism. Thus, on September 20, 2001, the
neoconservative strategists of the Project for the New American Century (PNAC)
sent a letter to President Bush arguing that the “war on terrorism” must also
include punitive measures against Iraq, Iran, and Syria:
It may
be that the Iraqi government provided assistance in some form to the recent
attack [of 9/11] on the United States. But even if evidence does not link Iraq
directly to the attack, any strategy aiming at the eradication of terrorism and
its sponsors must include a determined effort to remove Saddam Hussein from
power in Iraq. Failure to undertake such an effort will constitute an early and
perhaps decisive surrender in the war on international terrorism…. We believe
the administration should demand that Iran and Syria immediately cease all
military, financial, and political support for Hezbollah and its operations.
Should Iran and Syria refuse to comply, the administration should consider
appropriate measures of retaliation against these known state sponsors of
terrorism.[xxi]
The letter’s
signatories included William Kristol, Gary Bauer, Eliot Cohen, Midge Decter,
Francis Fukuyama, Frank Gaffney, Eli Jacobs, Michael Joyce, Donald Kagan, Jeane
Kirkpatrick, Charles Krauthammer, Richard Perle,
Martin Peretz, Norman Podhoretz, Randy Scheunemann, Stephen J. Solars, Leon
Wieseltier, and Marshall Wittmann.
In the 29 October 2002 issue of the Weekly Standard, William
Kristol and Robert Kagan, two of the leading figures of the neoconservative
cabal, reveal more of the Cabal’s plan of changing regimes and reestablishing a
new world order:
When all
is said and done, the conflict in Afghanistan will be to the war on terrorism
what the North Africa campaign was to World War II: an essential beginning on
the path to victory. But compared with what looms over the horizon—a
wide-ranging war in locales from Central Asia to the Middle East and,
unfortunately, back again to the United States—Afghanistan will prove but an
opening battle…. But this war will not end in Afghanistan. It is going to spread
and engulf a number of countries in conflicts of varying intensity. It could
well require the use of American military power in multiple places
simultaneously.[xxii]
This
ominous projection of another world war was made more explicit by Eliot Cohen
three weeks later in a Wall Street Journal article, titled “World War
IV”:
Osama
bin Laden's War?…. A less palatable
but more accurate name is World War IV.
The Cold War was World War III….
The enemy in this war is not "terrorism,”…but militant Islam. The enemy
has an ideology, and an hour spent surfing the Web will give the average citizen
at least the kind of insights that he might have found during World Wars II and
III by reading "Mein Kampf" or the writings of Lenin, Stalin or Mao.[xxiii]
Professor
Cohen is not alone in this portrayal of radical Islam as “the enemy,” the
“threat to Western values,” and the culprit in “the clash of
civilizations.” His ideological
cohorts in crafting this insidious theory include: Bernard Lewis, Daniel Pipes,
Samuel Huntington, Charles Krauthammer, and a whole host of other co-thinkers.[xxiv]
Defining
the President’s Mission
As shown
earlier, the neoconservative strategists set out to place their plans of
militarism and regime change on the U.S. foreign policy agenda soon after the
demise of the Soviet Union; that is, under Presidents Bush Sr. and Clinton. Despite certain concessions to the
demands of the neoconservatives, both Presidents stopped short of fully
complying with those demands. With
the arrival of their candidate, Bush Jr., in the White House, however,
neoconservative strategists redoubled their efforts to shape U.S. foreign
policy. As they competed with the
traditional, multilateral approach to foreign policy, favored by State
Department’s Colin Powell, in order to win the President over to their policy of
unilateralism, neoconservative strategists began to define foreign policy issues
and objectives in religious, missionary, and mythical terms. As James P. Pinkerton (of the New
York Newsday) puts it, the neoconservatives’
word-creations,
such as "moral clarity," "axis of evil" and "Bush Doctrine," spread far and
wide. These word-weavings were repeated over and over again, in magazines, books
and cable news shows. Bush became
Winston Churchill, Saddam Hussein became Hitler, the Arabs were ripe for
Americanization, and the U.S. military became the sword not only of vengeance,
but also of do-gooding and nation-building.[xxv]
Not
accidentally, the strategy of couching foreign policy in missionary terms
worked. As a born-again Christian,
and as someone with little patience for nuances and gray areas, the President
was energized once he was led to view his international responsibilities as
“missions.” The missionary approach
was further reinforced by the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon. As Stephen Sniegoski put
it, “Neoconservatives have presented the September 11 atrocities as a lightning
bolt to make President Bush aware of his destiny: destroying the evil of
terrorism.” Norman Podhoretz, one
of the neoconservative strategists, gleefully describes the “transfigured”
President:
A
transformed — or, more precisely, a transfigured — George W. Bush appeared
before us. In an earlier article ... I suggested, perhaps presumptuously, that
out of the blackness of smoke and fiery death let loose by September 11, a kind
of revelation, blazing with a very different fire of its own, lit up the
recesses of Bush's mind and heart and soul. Which is to say that, having
previously been unsure as to why he should have been chosen to become President
of the United States, George W. Bush now knew that the God to whom, as a
born-again Christian, he had earlier committed himself had put him in the Oval
Office for a purpose. He had put him there to lead a war against the evil of
terrorism.[xxvi]
Having
helped define the President’s “mission,” the neoconservative cabal took the most
advantage of the thus energized President.
By deliberately couching their nefarious objectives in missionary terms,
and repeatedly defining their enemies, real or imaginary, in biblical language
(“axis of evil, evil-doers, good vs. evil, day of reckoning,” and the like),
they had no difficulty getting the President to carry out their agenda,
including the invasion of Iraq. Whether in light of the less-than
successful mission in Iraq, along with all the underlying instances of
deception, disinformation, and political scandal, the President will continue to
(or can) carry out the rest of the neoconservatives’ plan of “World War IV”
beyond Iraq remains to be seen.
In
Summary. Two major forces are behind the Bush
Administration’s policy of war and mischief in the Middle East. They are (a) the Military-Industrial
Complex, and (b) the Zionist proponents of establishing a Jewish state in the
“Land of Israel.” The perceived
interests of both of these forces converge on the promotion of war and
convulsion in the region. It is
this convergence of interests on war that explains the unholy alliance between
representatives of these two ominously powerful interest groups.
Militant
Zionists, striving to capture the “Land of Israel,” have always tried to portray
opponents of their policies of expulsion and expansion as enemies of the United
States, and to thereby get the U.S. military force to fight and/or support
their
wars of territorial extension. Under the bipolar world of the Cold War
era, however, the United States needed its Arab/Muslim “allies” in the Middle
East; which meant that, in its support of Israel, the U.S. could not at the time
afford to abandon those allies and comply with the Zionist demands of regime
and/or border change in the region.
But the
collapse of the Soviet system and the end of the Cold War changed this
geopolitical scenario. As noted earlier, the end of the Cold War prompted the
Military-Industrial Complex to seek substitutes for the “Soviet threat” in order
to maintain the continued escalation of Pentagon spending. And as representatives of the arms
industries thus sought substitutes for the Soviet threat of the Cold war era,
they found in radical Islam,
long promoted by a number of theoretical leaders of militant Zionism and their
ideological cohorts as a major “threat to Western civilization,” an apparently
plausible
candidate.[xxvii] Henceforth, the interests of militant
Zionists in fighting “radical Islam” converged with those of the U.S. military
industries—hence, the alliance of the Military-Industrial Complex and hard-core
Zionists. The cabal of
neoconservative warmongers in and around the Bush Administration largely
represents this alliance.
Once
radical Islam is thus portrayed as the “source of international conflicts,” the
“substitute for the Soviet threat,” and the “menace to Western civilization,”
preemptive measures to counter such a threat follow logically. The neoconservatives’ case for “World
War IV” (going beyond Iraq to Iran, Syria…) rests on this logic.[xxviii]
What can
be done to rein in the dangerously unbridled neoconservative war makers?
There is
no doubt that the neoconservatives’ adventurous foreign policy is a threat to
world peace and stability. There is
also no doubt that their policies are also menacing U.S. citizens’ civil
liberties, undermining their social safety net programs, curtailing the working
people’s rights and opportunities, plundering national resources, and creating a
huge fiscal strain. Equally there
is no question that the neoconservatives’ pyrrhic success—so far—in shaping the
U.S. foreign policy, including the invasion of Iraq, has benefited from heavy
doses of deception, disinformation, and Machiavellian manipulations.
The
question, rather, is: how long can the cabal of neoconservatives get away with
telling so many lies, committing so much fraud, and doing so much damage—both
domestically and internationally?
External/international
resistance to the neoconservatives’ adventures will obviously help. But the
crucial, restraining opposition has to come from within, that is, from the
American people. Such opposition to neoconservatives’ destructive policies is
bound to unfold. There are strong
indications that, as Eric Margolis points out, “The longer U.S. forces stay in
Iraq, the uglier the guerrilla war will get. And the more Americans will realize
they were led into this needless conflict by a [President] manipulated by a
cabal of neo-conservatives whose primary loyalty is not to the United States.”[xxix]
There is
hope that as the American people realize that their sons and daughters are
losing their lives because some policy makers lied, or that they are losing
their jobs and livelihood because their national resources are squandered on the
production of the means of destruction, they will demand the kind of
accountability that will go some way to make the perpetrators of war and
deception pay for their destructive policies.
About
the author:
Dr.
Ismael Hossein-Zadeh Teaches Economics at Drake University
[ii] It is important to distinguish between
hard-line/militant and moderate Zionists.
While almost all Zionists would say that they dream of living in
Palestine, they greatly differ over what this really means. Generally speaking, two broad approaches
have evolved over this issue: the moderate and the hard-line approaches. Moderate Zionists do not deny the right
of non-Jews to live in Palestine.
They favor the idea of accommodation and peaceful coexistence with the
non-Jewish natives of Palestine, either as a democratic, federal state, or as
two independent states.
Accordingly, they do not support the idea of forceful occupation of land,
expulsion of indigenous people, and the establishment of a Jewish state based on
exclusively or overwhelmingly Jewish population. Albert Einstein is the most well-known
proponent of this approach.
Hard-core Zionists, by contrast, aim at capturing the “entire Palestine,”
the “Promised Land,” stretching from Jordan to the Mediterranean, and
establishing a state there based on exclusive or overwhelming majority of Jewish
people. Accordingly, they advocate
the policy of physical expulsion of the Palestinians from this “Promised
Land.” “The iron wall,” a phrase
put forward by Ze'ev Jabotinsky in the 1920s, as the
appropriate policy for militant Zionists to adopt in Palestine, succinctly
captures this approach. It
is this approach of Zionism, the hard-line approach, that I critique in this
essay.
[iii] That earlier article, “Behind the Drive
to War: Bush’s Escalating Military Budget,” can be viewed at: http://www.counterpunch.org/zadeh1025.html . My brief discussion of the issue here consists largely
of excerpts and paraphrases from that earlier article.
[iv] Excluding the elusive costs of the
military adventure in Iraq, the official pentagon budget For the fiscal year
2004 will amount to nearly $400
billion, the highest item in the Federal budget. (Officially, military spending is the
second highest item in the Federal budget after Social Security payments. But
Social Security is a self-financing trust fund. So, in reality, military
spending is the highest budget item.) In fact, if the social security trust fund
is excluded from the Federal budget, as it should be, the military budget will
be more than one-third of the entire Federal budget.
[v] Evidence of this strategy is
overwhelming, especially in light of the subsequent U.S. Congressional hearings
on the issue. For example, an
official message delivered to Saddam Hussein by the US Ambassador April Glaspie
on 25 July 1990, just days before the invasion of Kuwait, pointed out: “We have
no opinion on . . . conflicts like your border dispute with Kuwait. . .
Secretary of State James Baker has directed our official spokesman to emphasize
this instruction. .. I have direct instructions from the President.” (For these
and more evidence see, among other sources, International Viewpoint, No.
200, February 18, 1991, p. 4; Douglas Kelner, The Persian Gulf TV War,
Boulder, Colorado, Westview Press, 1992; and James Ridgeway (ed.), The
March to War, 1991).
[vii] Tom Segev,
One Palestine, Complete: Jews and Arabs under the British Mandate (New
York: Metropolitan Books, 2000), pp.404-5; as quoted in Stephen J.
Sniegoski, “The War on Iraq: Conceived in Israel,” http://www.thornwalker.com:16080/ditch/snieg_conc1.htm . For a
history of Zionist ideas on expulsion, see, e.g., Benny Morris,
Righteous Victims (New York: 1999); Nur Masalha, Expulsion of the
Palestinians: The Concept of "Transfer" in Zionist Political Thought,
1882-1948 (Washington: Institute of Palestine Studies, 1992).
[xi] This contradicts the view/judgement that
the U.S.-Israeli relationship represents a case of “tail wagging the dog;”
i.e., the U.S. foreign policy in
the Middle East is shaped by the Israeli/Zionist leaders. While, no doubt, the powerful Jewish
lobby exerts considerable influence over the U.S. foreign policy in the Middle
East, the efficacy and the extent of that influence depends, ultimately, on the
real economic and geopolitical interests of the U.S. foreign policy makers. In other words, U.S. foreign policy
makers would go along with the demands of the Jewish lobby only if such demands
also serve the interests of those policy makers (not necessarily the interests
of the American people, or the U.S. “national interests” in general).
[xiii] The literature on the
neo-conservative think tanks, their family-like close ties, and their relentless
scheming to further the interests of the war industries, on the one hand, and
those of militant Zionism, on the other, is plentiful. Here is a sample: (a) Stephen J.
Sniegoski, “The War on Iraq: Conceived in Israel”: http://www.thornwalker.com:16080/ditch/snieg_conc.htm ; (b) Brian Whitaker, "US
think tanks give lessons in foreign policy," The Guardian, August 19, 2002: http://www.guardian.co.uk/elsewhere/journalist/story/0,7792,777100,00.html ; (c) Richard H. Curtis, “Israel’s Lobby Tries to Widen
Net Against Terrorism,” Washington Report on Middle East Affairs,
December 2001: http://www.wrmea.com/archives/december01/0112026.html ; and (d) Akiva Eldar, “An Unholy
Allliance with the Christian Right: Gary Baurer and Likud,” Counterpunch,
April 8, 2003: http://www.counterpunch.org/eldar04092003.html
.
[xvii] Contrary to the neoconservatives’
claims, their belligerent policies serve neither the interests of the ordinary
citizens of the United States, nor the long-term interests of the Jewish people.
They serve primarily the interests of the U.S. arms manufacturers and the
interests of militant Zionism—as perceived by its (misguided) leaders.
[xxiii] Eliot A.
Cohen, "World War IV," The Wall Street Journal, November 20, 2001, http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=95001493
. After arguing that “the enemy in
this war is not terrorism,…but militant Islam,” Professor Cohen goes on to suggest that
the first battle in this war should start with Iraq: “Iraq is the obvious
candidate.” Now, even if we
assume that Professor Cohen is right in saying that “the enemy is militant
Islam,” it is not clear why, then, he suggests that the war against militant
Islam, “World War IV,” should start with Iraq, because the fact is that not much
love was lost between the secular Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein and militant
Islam. Nor have any ties been found between Saddam’s regime and Al Qaeda.
[xxiv] See, for example, (a) Bernard Lewis, What Went Wrong: Western Impact and
Middle Eastern Response, Oxford/New York 2001; (b) Samuel Huntington, The
Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order, New York 1997; (c)
Charles Krauthammer, Interview, Middle East Quarterly, December 1994; and
(d) Daniel Pipes, ‘There are no
Moderates: Dealing with Fundamentalist Islam’, The National Interest,
Fall 1995.
[xxvii] For a number of these theorists and/or
ideologues see footnote 24 above.
[xxviii] For a sample of views
expressed within the neoconservative handlers of the President’s foreign
policy in favor of “World War IV”
see, for examples, (a) Justin Raimondo,
“World War IV: Has it arrived?”
in http://www.antiwar.com/justin/j040403.html
; (b) Gail Russell Chaddock,
“Tracing the Roots of America's war in Iraq: 'Neocon' architects of a muscular
US policy eye more regime changes in the region,” in http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/0409/p03s01-uspo.html
; (c) Herald Tribune,
Special to World Tribune.com, Friday, April 4, 2003, “What's Next? U.S. Set Sights on
Iran, North Korea,” in http://216.26.163.62/2003/ss_wmd_04_03.html