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pulling together the pieces

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Craig Brozefsky

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Oct 8, 2001, 12:31:24 PM10/8/01
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From: "Mark Jones" <mark....@tiscali.co.uk>
Subject: Fw: [L-I] pulling together the pieces
To: "ml" <mar...@lists.panix.com>
Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2001 14:17:34 +0100
Reply-To: mar...@lists.panix.com

fwd from Stan Goff:

I’m a retired Special Forces Master Sergeant. That doesn’t cut much for
those who will only accept the opinions of former officers on military
matters, since we enlisted swine are assumed to be incapable of grasping
the nuances of doctrine.

But I wasn’t just in the army, I studied and taught military science and
doctrine. I was a tactics instructor at the Jungle Operations Training
Center in Panama, and I taught Military Science at West Point. And
contrary to the popular image of what Special Forces does, SF’s mission is
to teach. We offer advice and assistance to foreign forces. That’s
everything from teaching marksmanship to a private to instructing a
Battalion staff on how to coordinate effective air operations with a sister
service.

Based on that experience, and operations in eight designated conflict areas
from Vietnam to Haiti, I have to say that the story we hear on the news and
read in the newspapers is simply not believable. The most cursory glance
at the verifiable facts, before, during, and after September 11th, does not
support the official line or conform to the current actions of the United
States government.

But the official line only works if they can get everyone to accept its
underlying premises. I’m not at all surprised about the Republican and
Democratic Parties repeating these premises. They are simply two factions
within a single dominant political class, and both are financed by the same
economic powerhouses. My biggest disappointment, as someone who identifies
himself with the left, has been the tacit acceptance of those premises by
others on the left, sometimes naively, and sometimes to score some morality
points. Those premises are twofold. One, there is the premise that what
this de facto administration is doing now is a “response” to September
11th. Two, there is the premise that this attack on the World Trade Center
and the Pentagon was done by people based in Afghanistan. In my opinion,
neither of these is sound.

To put this in perspective we have to go back not to September 11th, but to
last year or further.

A man of limited intelligence, George W. Bush, with nothing more than his
name and the behind-the-scenes pressure of his powerful father—a former
President, ex-director of Central Intelligence, and an oil man—is
systematically constructed as a candidate, at tremendous cost. Across the
country, subtle and not-so-subtle mechanisms are put into place to
disfranchise a significant fraction of the Democrat’s African-American
voter base. This doesn’t come out until Florida becomes a battleground for
Electoral College votes, and the magnitude of the story has been suppressed
by the corporate media to this day. In a decision so lacking in
legitimacy, the Supreme Court will neither by-line the author of the
decision nor allow the decision to ever be used as a precedent, Bush v.
Gore awards the presidency of the United States to a man who loses the
popular vote in Florida and loses the national popular vote by over
600,000.

This de facto regime then organizes a very interesting cabinet. The Vice
President is an oil executive and the former Secretary of Defense. The
National Security Advisor is a director on the board of a transnational oil
corporation and a Russia scholar. The Secretary of State is a man with no
diplomatic experience whatsoever, and the former Chair of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff. The other interesting appointment is Donald Rumsfeld as
Secretary of Defense. Rumsfeld is the former CEO of Searle
Pharmaceuticals. He and Cheney were featured as speakers at the May, 2000,
Russian-American Business Leaders Forum. So the consistent currents in
this cabinet are petroleum, the former Soviet Union, and the military.

Based on the record of Daddy Bush, in all his guises, and the general
trajectory of US foreign policy as far back as the Carter Administration, I
feel I can reasonably conclude that Middle Eastern and South Asian fossil
fuels are one of their major preoccupations. Not just because this klavern
has some very direct financial interests in fossil fuel, but because they
surely know that worldwide oil production is peaking as we speak, and will
soon begin a permanent and precipitous decline that will completely change
the character of civilization as we know it within 20 years. Even the left
seems to be in deep denial about this, but the math is available. And, no,
alternative energies and energy technologies will not save us. All the
alternatives in the world can not begin to provide more than a tiny
fraction of the energy base now provided by oil. This makes it more than a
resource, and the drive to control what’s left more than an economic
competition.

I further conclude that the economic colonization of the former Soviet
Union is probably high on that agenda, and in fact has a powerful synergy
with the issue of petroleum. Russia not only holds vast untapped resources
that beckon to imperialism in crisis, it remains a credible military and
nuclear challenger in the region.

We have not one, but three members of the Bush de facto cabinet with
military credentials, which makes the cabinet look quite a lot like a
military General Staff. All this way before September 11th.

Then there’s the subject of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. NATO
might have expected consignment to the dustbin of the Cold War after the
Eastern Bloc shattered in 1991. Peace dividend and all that. But it didn’
t. It expanded directly into the former states of the Eastern Bloc toward
the former Soviet Union, and contributed significant forces to the
devastation of Iraq—a key country in the world oil market, over which
control translates into the ability to manipulate oil prices.

NATO is a military formation, and the United States exerts the controlling
interest in it. It seemed like a form without a function, but it remedied
that pretty quickly.

Then when Yugoslavia refused to play ball with the International Monetary
Fund, the US and Germany began a systematic campaign of destabilization
there, even using some of the veterans of Afghanistan in that campaign.
NATO became the military arm of that agenda—the break-up of Yugoslavia into
compliant statelets, the further containment of the former Soviet Union,
and the future pipeline easement for Caspain Sea oil to Western European
markets through Kosovo.

You see, this is important to understand, and people—even those against the
war talk—are tending to overlook the significance of it. NATO is not a
guarantor of international law, and it is not a humanitarian organization.
It is a military alliance with one very dominant partner. And it can no
longer claim to be a defensive alliance against European socialists. It is
an instrument of military aggression.

NATO is the organization that is now going to thrust further along the 40th
parallel from the Balkans through the Southern Asian Republics of the
former Soviet Union. The US military has already taken control of a base
in Uzbekistan. No one is talking about how what we are doing seems to be a
very logical extension of a strategy that was already in motion, and has
been in motion for two decades. Once we recognize the pattern of activity
designed to simultaneously consolidate control over Middle Eastern and
South Asian oil, and contain and colonize the former Soviet Union,
Afghanistan is exactly where they need to go to pursue that agenda.

Afghanistan borders Iran, India, and even China but, more importantly, the
Central Asian Republics of the former Soviet Union, Uzbekistan,
Turkmenistan and Tajikistan. These border Kazakhstan. Kazakhstan borders
Russia. Turkmenistan sits on the Southeastern quadrant of the Caspian Sea,
whose oil the Bush Administration dearly covets. Afghanistan is necessary
for two things: as a base of operations to begin the process of
destabilizing, breaking off, and establishing control over the South Asian
Republics, which will begin within the next 18-24 months in my opinion, and
constructing a pipeline through Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, and Pakistan to
deliver petroleum to the Asian market.

The BBC was recently told by Niaz Naik, a Pakistani Foreign Secretary, that
senior American officials were warning them as early as mid-July that
military action for mid-October was being planned for Afghanistan. In
1996, the Department of Energy was issuing reports on the desirability of a
pipeline through Afghanistan, and in 1998, Unocal testified before the
House Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific that this pipeline was crucial
to transport Caspian Basin oil to the Indian Ocean.

Given this evidence that a military operation to secure at least a portion
of Afghanistan has been on the table, possibly as early as five years ago,
I can’t help but conclude that the actions we are seeing put into motion
now are part of a pre-September 11th agenda. I’m absolutely sure of that,
in fact. The planning alone for operations, of this scale, that are now
taking shape, would take many months. And we are seeing them take shape in
mere weeks.

It defies common sense. This administration is lying about this whole
thing being a “reaction” to September 11th. That leads me, in short order,
to be very suspicious of their yet-to-be-provided evidence that someone in
Afghanistan is responsible. It’s just too damn convenient. Which also
leads me to wonder—just for the sake of knowing—what actually did happen on
September 11th, and who actually is responsible.

The so-called evidence is a farce. The US presented Tony Blair’s puppet
government with the evidence, and of the 70 so-called points of evidence,
only nine even referred to the attacks on the World Trade Center, and those
points were conjectural. This is a bullshit story from beginning to end.
Presented with the available facts, any 16-year old with a liking for
courtroom dramas could tear this story apart like a two-dollar shirt. But
our corporate press regurgitates it uncritically. But then, as we should
know by now, their role is to legitimize.

This cartoon heavy they’ve turned bin Laden into makes no sense, when you
begin to appreciate the complexity and synchronicity of the attacks. As a
former military person who’s been involved in the development of countless
operations orders over the years, I can tell you that this was a very
sophisticated and costly enterprise that would have left what we call a
huge “signature”.

In other words, it would be very hard to effectively conceal.

So there’s a real question about why there was no warning of this. That
can be a question about the efficacy of the government’s intelligence
apparatus. That can be a question about various policies in the various
agencies that had to be duped to orchestrate this action. And it can also
be a question about whether or not there was foreknowledge of the event,
and that foreknowledge is being covered up. To dismiss this concern out of
hand as the rantings of conspiracy nuts is premature. And there is a
history of this kind of thing being done by national political bosses,
including the darling of liberals, Franklin Roosevelt. The evidence is
very compelling that the Roosevelt Administration deliberately failed to
act to stop Pearl Harbor in order to mobilize enough national anger to
enter the World War II.

I have no idea why people aren’t asking some very specific questions about
the actions of Bush and company on the day of the attacks. Follow along:

Four planes get hijacked and deviate from their flight plans, all the while
on FAA radar. The planes are all hijacked between 7:45 and 8:10 AM Eastern
Daylight Time.

Who is notified?

This is an event already that is unprecedented. But the President is not
notified and going to a Florida elementary school to hear children read.

By around 8:15 AM, it should be very apparent that something is terribly
wrong. The President is glad-handing teachers.

By 8:45, when American Airlines Flight 11 crashes into the World Trade
Center, Bush is settling in with children for his photo ops at Booker
Elementary. Four planes have obviously been hijacked simultaneously, an
event never before seen in history, and one has just dived into the worlds
best know twin towers, and still no one notifies the nominal Commander in
Chief.

No one has apparently scrambled any Air Force interceptors either.

At 9:03, United Flight 175 crashes into the remaining World Trade Center
building. At 9:05, Andrew Card, the Presidential Chief of Staff whispers
to George W. Bush. Bush “briefly turns somber” according to reporters.

Does he cancel the school visit and convene an emergency meeting? No.

He resumes listening to second graders read about a little girl’s pet
fucking goat, and continues this banality even as American Airlines Flight
77 conducts an unscheduled point turn over Ohio and heads in the direction
of Washington DC.

Has he instructed Chief of Staff Card to scramble the Air Force? No.

An excruciating 25 minutes later, he finally deigns to give a public
statement telling the United States what they already have figured out;
that there’s been an attack by hijacked planes on the World Trade Center.

There’s a hijacked plane bee-lining to Washington, but has the Air Force
been scrambled to defend anything yet? No.

At 9:30, when he makes his announcement, American Flight 77 is still ten
minutes from its target, the Pentagon.

The Administration will later claim they had no way of knowing that the
Pentagon might be a target, and that they thought Flight 77 was headed to
the White House, but the fact is that the plane has already flown South and
past the White House no-fly zone, and is in fact tearing through the sky at
over 400 nauts.

At 9:35, this plane conducts another turn, 360 degrees over the Pentagon,
all the while being tracked by radar, and the Pentagon is not evacuated,
and there are still no fast-movers from the Air Force in the sky over
Alexandria and DC.

Now, the real kicker. A pilot they want us to believe was trained at a
Florida puddle-jumper school for Piper Cubs and Cessnas, conducts a
well-controlled downward spiral, descending the last 7,000 feet in
two-and-a-half minutes, brings the plane in so low and flat that it clips
the electrical wires across the street from the Pentagon, and flies it with
pinpoint accuracy into the side of this building at 460 nauts.

When the theory about learning to fly this well at the puddle-jumper school
began to lose ground, it was added that they received further training on a
flight simulator.

This is like saying you prepared your teenager for her first drive on I-40
at rush hour by buying her a video driving game. It’s horse shit!

There is a story being constructed about these events. My crystal ball is
not working today, so I can’t say why.

But at the least, this so-called Commander-in-Chief and his staff that we
are all supposed to follow blindly into some ill-defined war on terrorism
is criminally negligent or unspeakably stupid. And at the worst, if more
is known or was known, and there is an effort to conceal the facts, there
is a criminal conspiracy going on.

Certainly, the Bush de facto administration was facing a confluence of
crises from which they were temporarily rescued by this event. Whether
they played a sinister role or not, there is little doubt that they have at
the very least opportunistically pounced on this attack to overcome their
lack of legitimacy, to shift the blame for the encroaching recession from
capitalism to the September 11th terror attack, to legitimize their
pre-existing foreign policy agenda, and to establish and consolidate
repressive measures domestically and silence dissent. In many ways,
September 11th pulled the Bush cookies out of the fire.

And given them the green light to begin constructing a long-term scenario
within which to establish fascistic control measures at home and abroad as
a citadel for the ruling class in the catastrophic conjuncture that we are
entering based on the end of oil.

This elephant in the living room is being studiously ignored. In fact, the
domestic repression has already begun, officially and unofficially. It’s
kind of a latter day McCarthyism. I participated in a teach-in at Chapel
Hill, North Carolina, on the 17th of September, and though not a single
person on the panel excused or justified the attacks, and every person
there offered either condolences and prayers for the victims, we were
excoriated within two days as “enemies of America.” Yesterday an op-ed
called for my deportation (to where, one can only guess). Now Herr
Ashcroft is fast tracking the biggest abrogation of US civil liberties
since the so-called anti-terrorism legislation after the Oklahoma City
bombing—which by the way hasn’t resulted in anti-terrorism but in the
acceleration of the application of the racist death penalty. The FBI has
defined terrorist groups not by whether any given group has ever acted as
terrorists, but by their beliefs. Some socialists a!
nd!
!
anti-globalization groups have already been identified by name as
terrorist groups, even though there is not a single shred of evidence that
they have ever participated in any criminal activity. It reminds me of the
Smith Act that was finally declared unconstitutional, but only after a hell
of a lot of people served a hell of a long time in jail for the crime of
thinking.

I think this also points to yet another huge problems that the Bush regime
was facing. Worldwide resistance to the whole so-called neoliberal agenda,
which is a prettied up term for debt-leverage imperialism. While debt and
the threat of sanctions has been used to coerce nations in the periphery,
we have to understand that the final guarantor of compliance remains
military action. For a global economic agenda, there is always a
corresponding political and military agenda.

The focal point of these actions in the short term is Southern Asia, but
they have already scripted this as a worldwide and protracted fight against
terrorism. It’s far better than drug wars as a rationalization, and the
drug war thing was being discredited in any case. Leftists are regaining
power and popularity in Venezuela, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Ecuador,
Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Brazil, and Argentina. Cuba has
gained immense prestige over the last few years. The empire is beginning
to unravel. We can hardly justify intervention in these places by saying
they are not towing the economic line by allowing the absolute domination
of their societies by transnational corporations. That exposes the agenda.
So we simply claim they are supporting terrorism.

It’s for all these reasons I say the left has missed the boat on this one,
by allowing them to get away with rushing past the question of who did what
on September 11th. If the official story is a lie, and I think the
circumstantial case is strong enough to stay with this question, then we
really do need to know what happened. And we need to understand concretely
what the motives of this administration are.

And we need to understand more than just their immediate motives, but where
the larger social forces that underwrite our situation right now are
headed. I do not think this administration is engaged in the deliberative
process of a political grouping that is on top of their game. They are
putting together some very deliberative technical solutions in response to
a larger situation that it slipping rapidly out of their control. Like
clear cutting. There’s a very smart technology being employed to do a very
dumb thing.

What they are responding to is not September 11th, but the beginning of a
permanent and precipitous decline in worldwide oil production, the
beginning of a deep and protracted worldwide recession, and the unraveling
of the empire.

This brings me to a point about what all this means for Americans’
security, which they are perfectly justified to worry about. The actions
being prepared by this administration will not only not enhance our
security, it will significantly degrade it. Military action against many
groups across the globe, which is what the administration is telling us
quite openly they are planning to do, will put a lot of backs against the
wall. That can’t be very secure.

The concept of war being touted here is a violation of the principles of
war on several counts, and will inevitably lead to military catastrophes,
if you’re inclined to view this from a position of moral and political
neutrality.

And the people who are now in possession of half the world’s remaining oil
reserves are subject to destabilization for which we can’t even pretend to
predict the consequences—but loss of access to critical energy supplies is
certainly within the realm of possibility. Worst of all, we will be
destabilizing Pakistan, a nuclear power in an active conflict with its
neighbor, and we will be provoking Russia, another nuclear power. The
security stakes don’t get any higher, and Americans can ill afford to
ignore nukes.

And I think that this domestic agenda is a tremendous threat to the
security of anyone who is critical of the government or their corporate
financiers, and we already know that the real threats are against
populations that can easily be scapegoated as the domestic crisis deepens.
There is a very real threat right now of creeping fascism in this country,
and that phenomenon requires its domestic enemies. Historically those
enemies have included leftists, trade unionists, and racially and
nationally oppressed sectors. This whole “state of emergency” mentality is
already being used to quiet the public discourses of anti-racism, of
feminism, of environmentalism, and of both socialism and anarchism. And
while there is token resistance by officials to anti-Muslim xenophobia, the
stereotypical images have saturated the media, and the government is
already beginning to openly re-instate racial profiling. It is only a
short step from there to go after other groups. We have long!
b!
!
een prepared by the ideologies of overt and covert racism, and racism as
both institution and corresponding psychology in the United States is
nearly intractable.

It’s for all these reason, I say emphatically that we can not accept
anything from this administration; not their policies nor their bullshit
stories. What they are doing is very, very dangerous, and the time to
fight back against them, openly, is right now, before they can consolidate
their power and their agenda. Once they have done that, our job becomes
much more difficult.

The left, if it has the capacity to self-organize out of its oblivion,
needs to understand its critical roles here. We have to play the role of
credible, hard-working, and non-sectarian partners in a broader
peace-movement. We have to study, synthesize, and describe our current
historical conjuncture. And we have to prepare leadership for the decisive
conflict that will emerge to first defeat fascism then take political
power.

Rosa Luxemburg’s words are truer than ever right now. We are not faced
with a choice between socialism and capitalism, but socialism or barbarism.
And what we can least afford are denial and timidity.


Stan Goff

I strongly recommend, for anyone who wants to find further background
material on the issues herein check out the websites at dieoff.org,
emperors-clothes.com, and globalcircle.com.


--
Craig Brozefsky <cr...@red-bean.com>
http://www.red-bean.com/~craig
The outer space which me wears it has sexual intercourse. - opus

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