Bush vendettas: Clearing the way to attack Iran?

Abstract. The outing of Eliot Spitzer might exemplify the pattern of outing Valerie Plame and deposing Admiral Fallon if there were a precipitating cause, as in these other instances. Although we have been told that Spiter’s transgressions were discovered as the result of a “routine tax inquiry”, an article he authored – which appeared in The Washington Post a month earlier – hints otherwise. There appears to be a pattern here, where the Fallon case may be the most serious.

Jim Fetzer

Madison, WI (March 25, 2008) – No one doubts that the Bush administration plays hardball politics and brooks no opposition. The depths of this attitude toward winning at all costs has been illustrated in many ways across a broad spectrum of issues, including standing up for telecommunications corporations to render them free from liability for conducting surveillance on the American people. Considerations of what would be in the best interests of the American people, what would uphold the rule of law and the principles of the Constitution to which Bush and Cheney have sworn an oath, simply do not matter. And similarly for those who cross them.

The most familiar example, no doubt, is the outing of Valerie Plame after her husband, Joseph Wilson, published a column in The New York Times (“What I Didn’t Find in Africa”, July 6, 2003). Former Ambassador Wilson explained that he had been dispatched to Niger in order to investigate allegations that Saddam Hussein had been attempting to obtain yellowcake for the purpose of developing nuclear weapons, which the administration had been touting as a major reason for invading Iraq. Wilson’s column in the nation’s newspaper of record was therefore extremely embarrassing to the Bush brain-trust, including Cheney, Rove, and Rumsfeld.

Based upon Patrick Fitzgerald’s extensive investigation, we now know that Cheney, Scooter Libby and Carl Rove, among others, initiated retaliation against Wilson by exposing the fact that his wife, Valerie Plame, worked for the CIA. Robert Novak and other reporters were employed as conduits to disclose this information, which was highly classified. Most of this is well known to the American people, except that Plame was supervising a covert network of operatives across several nations concerned with constraining the proliferation of nuclear weapons, including in the Middle East. Her exposure nullified its viability, almost certainly leading to the death of covert contacts and destroying the efficacy of intelligence assets, including dummy CIA corporations.

The result was to make the United States vastly less safe and secure from nuclear threats than would otherwise have been the case. A more recent example raises equally disturbing questions about the commitment of this administration to the well-being of the American people. Virtually every serious student of military history agrees that the invasion of Iraq qualifies as the greatest blunder in American history, even outranking the travesty known as “Vietnam”. The cost alone has been projected to reach $3 trillion and is currently running $12 billion per month (“Iraq war’s economic toll grows”, The Capital Times, March 10, 2008). Most of them harbor no doubts that even the Iraq debacle would be overshadowed if the United States were now to launch an attack on Iran.

The administration’s attempts to vilify Iran by false translations of speeches by its leaders, by dubious reports of its attempts to develop nuclear weapons and by grossly exaggerated claims of Iranian involvement in the war in Iraq have caused considerable concern at home and abroad. Some of us have taken solace from the consideration that Admiral William Fallon, the head of U.S. Central Command and the top U.S. commander in the Middle East, has made it plain that there would be no invasion of Iran on his watch. That stance made him “The Man Between War and Peace” (Esquire, March 11, 2008), until Thomas P.M. Barnett published a substantial study that emphasized the extent to which Fallon’s stance was in conflict with that of the administration.

As those who have read Jacob Weisberg, The Bush Tragedy (2008), understand, the President’s personality is such that he has a profound need to believe he is in charge – that he is “the decider” – whether or not that is the case. Cheney has astutely grasped his ego’s modus operandi by filling in the power vacuum created by the gap between Bush’s belief in his exercise of power and its remarkable limitations. Clearly, so long as he was not directly confronted with Fallon’s apostasy, Bush would not feel compelled to act to remove him. But Barnett’s article, which portrayed him rather than Bush as the man who stood between war and peace, appears to have enraged Bush and motivated him to remove his competitor. Bush has to be seen as “The Man Between War and Peace”, not Fallon.

Anyone who thinks this was the innocent outcome of a sincere effort to compose an article that expressed admiration for a brilliant admiral is missing a key piece of the puzzle. Barnett is the author of The Pentagon’s New Map (2004), which elaborates the theory that democratic states are non-belligerent states and outlines what appears to have become the administration’s road map for securing world domination during its second term in office. Fallon must have come across to Barnett as an obstacle in the way of the realization of the grand scheme for (one or another version of) the new world order. By emphasizing Fallon’s differences from Bush, Barnett made it impossible for Bush not to act. By flattering Fallon, Barnett set Fallon’s head up on a tee.

On its face, the situation with respect to Eliot Spitzer, the Democratic governor of New York, looks completely different. If you buy the official story, “Revelations about Governor Began in Routine Tax Inquiry” (The New York Times, March 11, 2008), then of course the situation looks like Spitzer was just extremely unlucky to have been caught because of the suspicious nature of financial transactions intended to conceal his expenditures for high-priced prostitutes. But if you think about it, that is a most unlikely explanation. The sums involved here – a few thousand per assignation – are not sufficiently substantial to have drawn attention. And the elaborate length to which emphasis has been placed upon this mechanism of discovery suggests that it is a cover-up.

For Spitzer to have been another target of a Bush vendetta, however, would have required the performance of an action (as in the case of Joseph Wilson) or the expression of an attitude (as in the case of Admiral Fallon) that directly confronted basic aspects of the Bush administration’s public stance in ways that Bush and Cheney found threatening. I have therefore been astonished to discover that, just one month before his outing, Spitzer published a column in The Washington Post (“Predatory Lenders’ Partner in Crime”, February 14, 2008), in which he explained that the administration’s own policies of deliberate neglect and of favoring cronies were major factors that contributed to the home mortgage crisis, perhaps the greatest economic catastrophe of our time.

No one familiar with Bush’s personality could miss the impact an article like this would have on Bush’s self-concept. It is no leap of logic to infer that he must have been infuriated and, as in the case of Wilson and of Fallon, wanted to strike out in retaliation on an enemy. That Spitzer’s fall should happen so shortly thereafter suggests that it was done out of vengeance to punish another voice speaking out about the dereliction of duty by his administration. It would not surprise me, either, if his equally strong commitment to reward his allies may be the reason he is going to such lengths to protect the telecommunications industry. Even with no legitimate security reasons for conducting surveillance of the American people, there could be many valuable political benefits, including gathering intelligence about the most intimate secrets of those who would criticize you.

In a recent article, “Why Bush Waterboarded Eliot Spitzer”, March 17, 2008), F. Willliam Engdahl reasons that Spitzer was targeted by a White House and Wall Street “dirty tricks” operation because he was undermining large-scale graft and corruption. Others have suggested that the Emperor’s Club was a Mossad front to gain valuable intelligence information and have it available for suitable political purposes. For the federal government to become so interested in a client of a prostitution ring appears to be so unusual that the situation calls for an alternative explanation. Another investigative journalist, Jerry Mazza, has uncovered multiple indications that Spitzer’s demise was contrived because he was a formidable force in moving against money-laundering, including by Russian-Israeli organized crime syndicates (“Spitzer taken down by Mossad?”, Online Journal, March 14, 2008; and “Postscript”, Online Journal, March 21, 2008).

The removal of Admiral Fallon, however, may indicate even more serious skullduggery afoot. In the tradition of the CIA, the administration advances “plausible explanations” in order to obscure what they have done. In the case of Admiral Fallon, for example, the Pentagon has denied that his resignation signals the prospect of an imminent attack on Iran. But Reuters has reported that he is not being allowed to retire from the service and is also not being allowed to testify before Congress (“Pentagon will not send Adm. Fallon to Congress on Iraq”, March 21, 2008). Here the name of the country of interest ought to be “Iran”, not “Iraq”. Iraq is old news. As recently as a year ago, Russian military sources were reporting that Bush was planning an aerial assault for April 6, 2007. Among the 20 targets were uranium enrichment facilities, research centers, and laboratories (“Operation Bite: April 6 sneak attack by US forces against Iran planned," Online Journal, 26 March 2007).

Cheney's current visit to the Middle East raises concerns that this option may be back on the table. According to Webster Tarpley, the previously planned attack on Iran was to have been launched from several bases, including the island of Diego Garcia, where B-52s are based, and several aircraft carriers in the Persian Gulf and with the Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean. Since Iran possesses the most sophisticated shore-to-ship missiles the world has ever seen, the probability of substantial losses of U.S. naval forces, potentially including thousands of lives, appeared to be considerable. Whether that consideration or the publication of information about it led to discarding the plan is not currently known. In the absence of novel electronic counter-measures that can address this problem – new defensive weapons of which the public is unaware – the risks involved in an attack of this kind (“a violent action against Iran”) are very serious. Indeed, the rationale for a new preventative attack in violation of international law, the UN Charter, and the U.S. Constitution appears to be extremely weak.

That rationale is to deny Iran access to the materials necessary to build nuclear weapons. The presumption that there is any kind of imminent threat here contradicts the National Intelligence Estimate on Iran publicly released in November 2007, which declared that Iran had “halted its nuclear weapons program” in 2003, which has been widely noted in the national press. What may be more surprising is that, even if Iran were to acquire nuclear weapons, it could not use them in an offensive capacity without anticipating its own nuclear annihilation. It is distressing that after nearly a half-century of success with MAD (“mutually assured destruction”) as a policy between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R., so few seem to have learned so little. The only apparent purpose that weapons of this kind can serve is defensive in creating a counter-threat to an attack from other nations.

The first reports of Fallon’s removal from his role as the head of U.S. Central Command said that there were strong differences between the admiral and General David Petraeus, especially that “he (Fallon) believed Iraq was slumping toward civil war and that the Iraqi government would be unable to turn the tide, meaning the U.S. should find a way to quickly disengage militarily” (“U.S. commander in Mideast steps down”, Los Angeles Times, March 12, 2008). If the removal of Fallon and Cheney's trip to the region are ominous signs – and Bush believes that his successor might not be strong enough to cope with this problem, which he does not want to leave behind – then Bush and Cheney may be about to embark upon a new military venture that could make our incursion into Iraq look like a kindergarten party. It is tragic that – at this crucial stage in history – the U.S. should be led by ideologues and rogues.

[This is an expanded version of a column that previously appeared in OpEdNews.]
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McKnight Professor Emeritus, University of Minnesota, Duluth; Founder, Scholars for 9/11 Truth; Editor, Assassination Research

Bush vendettas

Bush vendettas

__________________________

McKnight Professor Emeritus, University of Minnesota, Duluth; Founder, Scholars for 9/11 Truth; Editor, Assassination Research

I think the author may be

I think the author may be mistaken about the immediate consequences of Admiral Fallon's dismissal. There was a similar story here about an attack on Iran planned for April 6, 2007.

__________________________

http://jacobfreeze.com

I caught that, too, Jacob.

I caught that, too, Jacob. Let's hope it doesn't happen now.

__________________________

McKnight Professor Emeritus, University of Minnesota, Duluth; Founder, Scholars for 9/11 Truth; Editor, Assassination Research

I basically agree with your

I basically agree with your article about Fallon and Spitzer. The FBI doesn't usually waste a whole lot of time busting escort services, and the style of their announcement about Spitzer, with a very uncharacteristic supply of details in the transcript of seven or eight phone calls, is another red flag. Similar transcripts are usually reserved for evidentiary proceedings in the courts, rather than an announcement of charges.

The dismissal of Fallon is much more serious, as you say, and I can't understand why the Democrats aren't ringing alarms all over Washington.

The Pentagon's arrogant refusal to allow Fallon to testify before Congress just adds insult to injury.

(Apologies for the screaming cliche' about "adding insult to injury," but it really seems to describe the basic style of the Bush administration better that anything else I can think of at the moment.)

All sorts of commentators in the Washington press corps approved of Fallon's dismissal, even a few, like Slate's Fred Kaplan, who aren't totally sold out to Bush.

If Lincoln had dismissed every general who advertised his own agenda, the Union Army would have been commanded by sergeants, and as soon as you gave a sergeant a star...

You get the idea.

But standards have changed for the worse in the realm of open discussion at all levels of power in the United States, even at the very top. When is the last time a President or CEO admitted any kind of mistake, unless allocution in open court was part of his sentence?

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http://jacobfreeze.com

Fallon's departure appears

Fallon's departure appears to signal the outcome of a war within the pentagon: Fallon's firing may very well be the opening shot of the war on iran.

There has been an ongoing battle in the executive branch about how to deal with the realities of our military defeats in the middle east and pakistan. Bush has failed in iraq and afghanistan, and the neocons are looking to severely damage iran to prevent iran from enjoying advantage from our government's military and political failures.

Independent of our machinations, iran's regional influence is rising. The regional authority, let alone the domestic legitimacy of our bitch dictators across the middle east is sinking.

Pakistan is about to throw our dictator out of office, and into jail, if they can muster the power. The war crimes of the jews against gaza have reached new heights, driving arabs across the middle east to a fervor pitch.

At this critical juncture bush has again thrown out the military commander of our middle eastern armed forces. (The only modern leaders that have replaced generals at the rate bush has fired generals are hitler and stalin.)  Bush did the same thing at the pentagon prior to launching his wars. Bush had to fire Shinseki when he based his hair-brained scheme to reassert american control over the middle east and their oil with a force insufficient for the task. Deja-vu?

In my opinion, it appears that Fallon's "retirement" indicates the neocons have won the shootout at the pentagon. It's looking more likely that a spring offensive against iran has been decided on. It's hard to tell how it will start.

Maybe the jews will stage a sneak attack by air. An incident between the navy and speedboats in the gulf may trigger a massive US air strike. Or maybe we will justify attacking iran by pulling some poor tortured soul out of our dungeons who was tortured into claiming to be an iranian terrorist sent directly by the ayatollah with orders to destroy iraq, Afghanistan, and the US too.

In any case, it appears that the administration will find some pretext to say they were forced into attacking iran.

 

these links may be of interest:

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Shinseki fired as Chief for honest analysis of Iraq war plans


BBC NEWS, 1-17-06; US special forces 'inside Iran'

Pentagon ready for spring attack on Iran, guardian, 2-10-07

Would Pace Attack Iran if Bush Ordered It? commondreams.org, 2-22-07

US generals ‘will quit’ if Bush orders Iran attack, Washington times on line, February 25, 2007

Bush Administration War Plans Directed Against Iran, STWR, 9-17-07

Pace fired for disputing attack on Iran? stwr 9-19-07

Uneasy allies in historic summit: Iran Secures Northern Border with Russia Anticipating hostilites from all other Quarters, BBC News, Oct 15, 2007

Corruption Updates 126, 2nd article on the page, US Actually declared Iranian Defense Department a Terrorist Organization: The whole Iranian Military, and Industrial Complex of Iran is declared a "Terror" Organization!

 

Corruption Updates 126, article 2b on the page, China not Down with US Sanctions

Corruption Updates 126, 3rd article on the page, Putin not Down with US Sanctions

 

Corruption Updates 127, 2nd article on the page, Iran Steps up Preparations for US War

 

 

Iran and Russia cooperating on mutual defense, BBC, Nov 13, 07

 

Chavez: us cut off, and Oil to 200 a barrel if us attacks iran, pravda, 11-15-07

Report contradicts Bush on Iran nuclear program, reuters, Mon Dec 3, 2007

Bush accuses Iran of thought crime, global security, 12-4-07

Iran stops accepting U.S. dollars for oil, ria novosti, 12-8-07

Iran-Russia talks, iran times, 12-11-07

 

Bush guns up the whole middle east, ISN Security Watch (14/12/07)

 

S faking iran gunboat incident? Democracy Now, 1-11-08

Is Israel Planning a Nuclear Strike on Iran? der spiegel, 1-8-07

 

Israel ready to attack Iran, ap, 1-14-08

essay: the saudi shift, committee, 2-04-08

 the full link lists are available at russia and iran

Mr. Fetzer, I wrote this

Mr. Fetzer, I wrote this piece that pertains to one of your points. The first aritcle is from the WP, the second is my perspective.

 

Six U.S. Attorneys Given 2nd Posting in Washington

By Dan Eggen
Washington
Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, April 10, 2007; A03

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/09/AR2007040901227_pf.html

A half-dozen sitting U.S. attorneys also serve as aides to Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales or are assigned other Washington postings, performing tasks that take them away from regular duties in their districts for months or even years at a time, according to officials and department records.

THE COMMITTEE SAYS:

Gonzales has US Attorneys in Babylonian Captivity

Apparently Gonzales is running US Attorney Offices around the country by keeping the Attorneys in his Washington office.

There are three types of serving US Attorneys today. The first group includes “loyal Bushies,” who will play ball. They will kill corruption investigations against Bush allies, and pursue Bush enemies with the power of the Law.

The second group, also appointed by Bush, Dares to Be Independent Prosecutors. The bodies of the Fired US Attorneys have just been thrown onto their front lawns. A simple warning message sent by the Administration: Fuck with US and Die.

Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfield used the “Fuck with Us and Die” strategy in the Pentagon to quash solid military advice. They used it on the CIA to produce trash intelligence. Most of Bush's appointees don't need this lesson; they serve greed and power before all else. Bush is their guide. Not duty, and certainly not our Constitution.

The third group we just learned about. This group resides in the pocket of the Attorney General, where they have put their dirty duty to greed, power, and party before their duty to Country and Constitution. Hell, they put loyalty before their duty to do their jobs.

Law, our Lawmakers, and our Judiciary are illegitimate tools of powerful special interests and the politicians who represent them. This must change now.

There is only one peaceful cure for the disease of Corruption that has killed our democracy: We must choke it off at it's source. The feeding tube of special interest bribery must be pulled from the mouths of our corrupted political elite. Every elected official must depend on the money of their local voters, not the special interests, to run for office.

Also See:

Corruption Updates 31, 1st article on page, ”GONZALES ATTACKS CONSTITUTION, JUDICIARY, AND HUMAN RIGHTS SIMULTANOUSLY”

Corruption Updates 46, 8th article on the page, "Prosecutor Posts Go To Bush Insiders:Bush packing US Attorney posts with biased insiders"

Read more articles About Abuse of the US Attorney