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Project Censured PNAC http://www.projectcensored.org/Publications/2004/1.html
(#1) The Neoconservative Plan
for Global Dominance
Sources:
The Sunday Herald September 15, 2002
Title: "Bush Planned Iraq 'regime change' before becoming President"
Author: Neil Mackay
Harper's Magazine October
2002
Title: "Dick Cheney's Song of America" Author: David Armstrong
Mother Jones March 2003 Title:
"The 30 Year Itch" Author: Robert Dreyfuss
Pilger.com December 12, 2002
Title: "Hidden Agendas" Author: John Pilger
Random Lengths News October
4, 2002
Title: "Iraq Attack-The Aims and Origins of Bush's Plans" Author:
Paul Rosenberg
Project Censored wishes
to acknowledge that Jim Lobe, the Washington, D.C. correspondent for Inter
Press Service (IPS), has been covering the ways in which neo-conservatives,
using the Project for the New American Century (PNAC) among other mechanisms,
used the 9/11 attacks to pursue their own agenda of global dominance and
reshaping the Middle East virtually from the outset of the Bush administration’s
“war on terrorism.” For more information, please vist the
following link: http://www.ipsnews.net/focus/neo-cons/index.asp
Faculty Evaluators: Phil Beard
Ph.D. and Tom Lough Ph.D.
Student Researcher: Dylan Citrin Cummins
Corporate Media Partial Coverage:
Atlantic Journal Constitution, 9/29/02, The President's Real goal in Iraq,
By Jay Bookman
*********
Over the last year corporate
media have made much of Saddam Hussein and his stockpile of weapons of
mass destruction. Rarely did the press or, especially, television address
the possibility that larger strategies might also have driven the decision
to invade Iraq. Broad political strategies regarding foreign policy do
indeed exist and are part of the public record. The following is a summary
of the current strategies that have formed over the last 30 years; strategies
that eclipse the pursuit of oil and that preceded Hussein's rise to power:
In the 1970s, the United States
and the Middle East were embroiled in a tug-of-war over oil. At the time,
American military presence in the Gulf was fairly insignificant and the
prospect of seizing control of Arab oil fields by force was pretty unattainable.
Still, the idea of this level of dominance was very attractive to a group
of hard-line, pro-military Washington insiders that included both Democrats
and Republicans. Eventually labeled "neoconservatives," this
circle of influential strategists played important roles in the Defense
Departments of Ford, Reagan and Bush Sr., at conservative think tanks
throughout the '80s and '90s, and today occupies several key posts in
the White House, Pentagon, and State Department. Most principal among
them are:
•Dick Cheney and Donald
Rumsfeld, our current Vice-President and Defense Secretary respectively,
who have been closely aligned since they served with the Ford administration
in the 1970s;
•Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, the key architect of the
post-war reconstruction of Iraq;
•Richard Perle, past-chairman and still-member of the Pentagon's
Defense Policy Board that has great influence over foreign military policies;
•William Kristol, editor of the Weekly Standard and founder of the
powerful, neo-conservative think-tank, Project for a New American Century.
In the 1970s, however, neither
high-level politicos, nor the American people, shared the priorities of
this small group of military strategists. In 1979 the Shah of Iran fell
and U.S. political sway in the region was greatly jeopardized. In 1980,
the Carter Doctrine declared the Gulf "a zone of U.S. influence."
It warned (especially the Soviets) that any attempt to gain control of
the Persian Gulf region would be regarded as an assault on the vital interests
of the U.S. and repelled by any means necessary, including military force.
This was followed by the creation of the Rapid Deployment Force —
a military program specifically designed to rush several thousand U.S.
troops to the Gulf on short notice.
Under President Reagan, the
Rapid Deployment Force was transformed into the U.S. Central Command that
oversaw the area from eastern Africa to Afghanistan. Bases and support
facilities were established throughout the Gulf region, and alliances
were expanded with countries such as Israel, Saudi Arabia, and Iraq.
Since the first Gulf War, the
U.S. has built a network of military bases that now almost completely
encircle the oil fields of the Persian Gulf.
In 1989, following the end
of the Cold War and just prior to the Gulf War, Dick Cheney, Colin Powell,
and Paul Wolfowitz produced the 'Defense Planning Guidance' report advocating
U.S. military dominance around the globe. The Plan called for the United
States to maintain and grow in military superiority and prevent new rivals
from rising up to challenge us on the world stage. Using words like 'preemptive'
and military 'forward presence,’ the plan called for the U.S. to
be dominant over friends and foes alike. It concluded with the assertion
that the U.S. can best attain this position by making itself 'absolutely
powerful.'
The 1989 plan was spawned after
the fall of the Soviet Union. Without the traditional threat to national
security, Cheney, Powell and Wolfowitz knew that the military budget would
dwindle without new enemies and threats. In an attempt to salvage defense
funding, Cheney and company constructed a plan to fill the 'threat blank'.
On August 2, 1990 President Bush called a press conference. He explained
that the threat of global war had significantly receded, but in its wake
a new danger arose. This unforeseen threat to national security could
come from any angle and from any power.
Iraq, by a remarkable coincidence,
invaded Northern Kuwait later the same day.
Cheney et al. were out of political
power for the eight years of Clinton’s presidency. During this time
the neo-conservatives founded the Project for the New American Century
(PNAC). The most influential product of the PNAC was a report entitled
"Rebuilding America's Defense," (www.newamericancentury.org)
which called for U.S. military dominance and control of global economic
markets.
With the election of George
W. Bush, the authors of the plan were returned to power: Cheney as vice
president, Powell as Secretary of State, and Wolfowitz in the number two
spot at the Pentagon. With the old Defense Planning Guidance as the skeleton,
the three went back to the drawing board. When their new plan was complete,
it included contributions from Wolfowitz's boss Donald Rumsfeld. The old
'preemptive' attacks have now become 'unwarned attacks.' The Powell-Cheney
doctrine of military 'forward presence' has been replaced by 'forward
deterrence.' The U.S. stands ready to invade any country deemed a possible
threat to our economic interests.
Update by David Armstrong
Just days after this story
appeared, the Bush administration unveiled its “new” National
Security Strategy, which effectively validated the article’s main
thesis. The NSS makes clear that the administration will pursue a policy
of pre-emption and overwhelming military superiority aimed at ensuring
US dominance. Since that time, the major media have generally come around
to the point of view presented in the article. The New York Times, which
originally rejected the article’s premise, now makes a virtual mantra
of the notion that the current security strategy is little more than a
warmed-over version of the policy drafted during the first Bush administration
of preventing new rivals from rising up to challenge the US in the wake
of the Soviet Union’s collapse. The article circulated widely, particularly
in the run up to the war in Iraq, and was entered into the Congressional
Record. It also became a topic of discussion on such outlets as the BBC,
NPR, MSNBC, various talk radio shows, and European newspapers. In the
process, it has substantially helped shape the debate about the Bush administration’s
foreign policy.
Update by Bob Dreyfuss
For months leading up to the
war against Iraq, it was widely assumed among critics of the war that
a hidden motive for military action was Iraq's oil, not terrorism or weapons
of mass destruction. In fact, "No Blood for Oil" became perhaps
the leading slogan and bumper sticker of the peace movement. Yet, there
was very little examination in the media of the role of oil in American
policy toward Iraq and the Persian Gulf, and what coverage did exist tended
to pooh-pooh or debunk the idea that the war had anything to do with oil.
So, I set out to place the war with Iraq in the context of a decades-long
U.S. strategy of building up a military presence in the region, arguing
that even before the war, the U.S. had turned the Gulf into a U.S. protectorate.
Perhaps most importantly, I showed that a motive behind the war was oil
as a national security issue, as a strategic commodity, not as a commercial
one — and that, in fact, most of the oil industry itself was either
opposed to or ambivalent about the idea of war against Saddam Hussein.
Yet the neoconservatives in the Bush administration, whose forebears had
proposed occupying the oil fields of the Gulf in the mid-1970s, sought
control of the oil in the region as the cornerstone of American empire.
Since the end of this war,
it has become clear that the United States (and the U.K.) have aggressively
sought to maintain direct control over Iraq's oil industry. When looters
devastated Baghdad, only the Ministry of Oil was unscathed, since U.S.
marines protected it. Since then, handpicked Iraqi officials have been
installed in the ministry, under the supervision of U.S. military and
civilian officials, and there is movement toward privatization of Iraq's
oil industry, a point that I emphasized in my writing on the topic before
the war. Not only that, but it is increasingly clear that France, Russia,
and China are likely to be excluded from either rebuilding the industry
and securing contracts for future Iraqi oil delivery.
I can't say that the media
followed up on my exposure of this issue, except that I appeared on a
number of radio and television talk show programs as a result of my writing
on Iraq, in both Mother Jones and The American Prospect, as well as C-Span,
CNBC, and CBC-TV in Canada. I was also invited to make a presentation
on "The Thirty-Year Itch" at the Transnational Institute in
Amsterdam. According to Mother Jones, the article drew more traffic to
its web site than any other article.
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