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http://www.crisispapers.org/Editorials/PNAC-Primer.htm
Bernard Weiner Co-Editor,
The Crisis Papers May 26, 2003
Recently, I was the guest
on a radio talk-show hosted by a thoroughly decent far-right Republican.
I got verbally battered, but returned fire and, I think, held my own.
Toward the end of the hour, I mentioned that the National Security Strategy—promulgated
by the Bush Administration in September 2002 -- now included attacking
possible future competitors first, assuming regional hegemony by force
of arms, controlling energy resources around the globe, maintaining a
permanent-war strategy, etc.
”I’m not making
up this stuff,” I said. “It’s all talked about openly
by the neo-conservatives of the Project for the New American Century—who
now are in charge of America’s military and foreign policy—and
published as official U.S. doctrine in the National Security Strategy
of the United States of America.”
The talk-show host seemed to
gulp, and then replied: “If you really can demonstrate all that,
you probably can deny George Bush a second term in 2004.”
Two things became apparent
in that exchange: 1) Even a well-educated, intelligent radio commentator
was unaware of some of this information; and, 2) Once presented with it,
this conservative icon understood immediately the implications of what
would happen if the American voting public found out about these policies.
So, a large part of our job
in the run-up to 2004 is to get this information out to those able to
hear it and understand the implications of an imperial foreign/military
policy on our economy, on our young people in uniform, on our moral sense
of ourselves as a nation, on our constitutional freedoms, and on our treaty
obligations—which is to say, our respect for the rule of law.
Nearly 40% of Bush’s
support is fairly solid, but there is a block of about 20% in between
that 40% and the 40% who can be counted upon to vote for a reasonable
Democratic candidate—and that 20% is where the election will be
decided. We need to reach a goodly number of those moderate (and even
some traditionally conservative) Republicans and independents with the
facts inherent in the dangerous, reckless, and expensive policies carried
out by the Bush Administration.
When these voters become aware
of how various, decades-old, popular programs are being rolled back or
eliminated (because there’s no money available for them, because
that money is being used to fight more and more wars, and because income
to the federal coffers is being siphoned-off in costly tax-cuts to the
wealthiest sectors of society), that 20% may be a bit more open to hearing
what we have to say. When it’s your kids’ schools being short-changed,
and your state’s and city’s services to citizens being chopped,
your bridges and parks and roadways and libraries and public hospitals
being neglected, your IRAs and pensions losing their value, and your job
not being as secure as in years past—in short, when you can see
the connection between Bush&Co.’s expensive military policies
and your thinner wallet and reduced social amenities, true voter-education
becomes possible. It’s still the economy, stupid.
The Origins of the
Crisis
Most of us Americans saw the
end of the Cold War as a harbinger of a more peaceful globe, and we relaxed
knowing that the communist world was no longer a threat to the U.S. The
Soviet Union, our partner in MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction) and Cold
War rivalry around the globe, was no more. This meant a partial vacuum
in international affairs. Nature abhors a vacuum.
The only major vacuum-filler
still standing after the Cold War was the United States. One could continue
traditional diplomacy on behalf of American ends—the kind of polite,
well-disguised defense of U.S. interests (largely corporate) and imperial
ambition carried out under Bush#1, Reagan, Clinton, et al.—knowing
that we’d mostly get our way eventually given our status as the
globe’s only Superpower. Or one could try to speed up the process
and accomplish those same ends overtly—with an attitude of arrogance
and in-your-face bullying—within maybe one or two Republican administrations.
Some of the ideological roots
of today’s Bush Administration power-wielders could be traced back
to political philosophers Leo Strauss and Albert Wohlstetter or to GOP
rightist Barry Goldwater and his rabid anti-communist followers in the
early-1960s. But, for simplicity’s sake let’s stick closer
to our own time.
In the early-1990s, there was
a group of ideologues and power-politicians on the fringe of the Republican
Party’s far-right. The members of this group in 1997 would found
The Project
for the New American Century (PNAC); their aim was to prepare for
the day when the Republicans regained control of the White House—and,
it was hoped, the other two branches of government as well—so that
their vision of how the U.S. should move in the world would be in place
and ready to go, straight off-the-shelf into official policy.
This PNAC group was led by
such heavy hitters as Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney, James Woolsey, Paul
Wolfowitz, Richard Perle, Bill Kristol, James Bolton, Zalmay M. Khalilzad,
William Bennett, Dan Quayle, Jeb Bush, most of whom were movers-and-shakers
in previous Administrations, then in power-exile, as it were, while Clinton
was in the White House. But even given their reputations and clout, the
views of this group were regarded as too extreme to be taken seriously
by the mainstream conservatives that controlled the Republican Party.
Setting Up PNAC
To prepare the ground for the
PNAC-like ideas that were circulating in the HardRight, various wealthy
individuals and corporations helped set up far-right think-tanks, and
bought up various media outlets—newspapers, magazines, TV networks,
radio talk shows, cable channels, etc.—in support of that day when
all the political tumblers would click into place and the PNAC cabal and
their supporters could assume control.
This happened with the Supreme
Court’s selection of George W. Bush in 2000. The “outsiders”
from PNAC were now powerful “insiders,” placed in important
positions from which they could exert maximum pressure on U.S. policy:
Cheney is Vice President, Rumsfeld is Defense Secretary, Wolfowitz is
Deputy Defense Secretary, I. Lewis Libby is Cheney’s Chief of Staff,
Elliot Abrams is in charge of Middle East policy at the National Security
Council, Dov Zakheim is comptroller for the Defense Department, John Bolton
is Undersecretary of State, Richard Perle is chair of the Defense Policy
advisory board at the Pentagon, former CIA director James Woolsey is on
that panel as well, etc. etc. (PNAC’s chairman, Bill Kristol, is
the editor of The Weekly Standard.) In short, PNAC had a lock on military
policy-creation in the Bush Administration.
But, in order to unleash their
foreign/military campaigns without taking all sorts of flak from the traditional
wing of the conservative GOP—which was more isolationist, more opposed
to expanding the role of the federal government, more opposed to military
adventurism abroad—they needed a context that would permit them
free rein. The events of 9/11 rode to their rescue. (In one
of their major reports, written in 2000, they noted that “the
process of transformation, even if it brings revolutionary change, is
likely to be a long one, absent some catastrophic and catalyzing event—like
a new Pearl Harbor.”)
The Bush Administration used
those acts of terrorism—and the fear generated in the general populace—as
their cover for enacting all sorts of draconian measures domestically
(the Patriot Act, drafted earlier, was rushed through Congress in the
days following 9/11; few members even read it) and as their rationalization
for launching military campaigns abroad.
The Domestic Ramifications
Even today, the Bush manipulators,
led by Karl Rove, continue to utilize fear and hyped-up patriotism and
a permanent war on terrorism as the basis for their policy agenda, the
top item of which, at this juncture, consists of getting Bush elected
in 2004. This, in order to continue to fulfill their primary objectives,
not the least of which domestically is to roll back and, where possible,
decimate and eliminate social programs that the far-right has hated since
the New Deal/Great Society days.
By and large, these long-established
programs are popular with Americans, so Bush&Co. can’t attack
them frontally—but if all the monies are tied up in wars, defense,
tax cuts, etc., they can go to the public and, in effect, say: “We’d
love to continue to fund Head Start and education and environmental protection
and drugs for the elderly through Medicare, but you see there’s
simply no extra money left over after we go after the bad guys. It’s
not our fault.”
So far, that stealth strategy
has worked. The Bush&Co. hope is that the public won’t catch
on to their real agenda—to seek wealth and power at the expense
of average citizens—until after a 2004 victory, and maybe not even
then. Just keep blaming the terrorists, the French, the Dixie Chicks,
peaceniks, fried potatoes, whatever. (Don’t get me wrong. The Islamic
fanatics that use terror as their political weapon are real and deadly
and need to be stopped. The question is: How to do that in ways that enhance
rather than detract from America’s long-term national interests?)
One doesn’t have to speculate
what the PNAC guys might think, since they’re quite open and proud
of their theories and strategies. Indeed, they’ve left a long, public
record that lays out quite openly what they’re up to. As I say,
it was all set down on the record years ago, but nobody took such extreme
talk seriously; now that they’re in power, actually making the policy
they only dreamed about a decade or so ago—with all sorts of scarifying
consequences for America and the rest of the world—we need to educate
ourselves quickly as to how the PNACers work and what their future plans
might be.
The PNAC Paper Trail
Here is a shorthand summary
of PNAC documents and strategies that have become U.S. policy. Some of
these you may have heard about before, but I’ve expanded and updated
as much as possible.
1. In 1992, then-Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney had a strategy report
drafted for the Department of Defense, written by Paul Wolfowitz, then
Under-Secretary of Defense for Policy. In it, the U.S. government was
urged, as the world’s sole remaining Superpower, to move aggressively
and militarily around the globe. The report called for pre-emptive attacks
and ad hoc coalitions, but said that the U.S. should be ready to act alone
when “collective action cannot be orchestrated.” The central
strategy was to “establish and protect a new order” that accounts
“sufficiently for the interests of the advanced industrial nations
to discourage them from challenging our leadership,” while at the
same time maintaining a military dominance capable of “deterring
potential competitors from even aspiring to a larger regional or global
role.” Wolfowitz outlined plans for military intervention in Iraq
as an action necessary to assure “access to vital raw material,
primarily Persian Gulf oil” and to prevent the proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction and threats from terrorism.
Somehow, this report leaked
to the press; the negative response was immediate. Senator Robert Byrd
led the Democratic charge, calling the recommended Pentagon strategy “myopic,
shallow and disappointing... .The basic thrust of the document seems to
be this: We love being the sole remaining superpower in the world and
we want so much to remain that way that we are willing to put at risk
the basic health of our economy and well-being of our people to do so.”
Clearly, the objective political forces hadn’t yet coalesced in
the U.S. that could support this policy free of major resistance, and
so President Bush the Elder publicly repudiated the paper and sent it
back to the drawing boards. (For the essence of the draft text, see Barton
Gellman’s “Keeping
the U.S. First; Pentagon Would Preclude a Rival Superpower”
in the Washington Post.
2. Various HardRight intellectuals outside the government were spelling
out the new PNAC policy in books and influential journals. Zalmay M. Khalilzad
(formerly associated with big oil companies, currently U.S. Special Envoy
to Afghanistan & Iraq ) wrote an important volume in 1995, “From
Containment to Global Leadership: America & the World After the Cold
War,” the import of which was identifying a way for the U.S. to
move aggressively in the world and thus to exercise effective control
over the planet’s natural resources. A year later, in 1996, neo-conservative
leaders Bill Kristol and Robert Kagan, in their Foreign Affairs article
“Towards a Neo-Reaganite Foreign Policy,” came right out and
said the goal for the U.S. had to be nothing less than “benevolent
global hegemony,” a euphemism for total U.S. domination, but “benevolently”
exercised, of course.
3. In 1998, PNAC unsuccessfully
lobbied President Clinton to attack Iraq and remove Saddam Hussein from
power. The
January letter from PNAC urged America to initiate that war even if
the U.S. could not muster full support from the Security Council at the
United Nations. Sound familiar? (President Clinton replied that he was
focusing on dealing with al-Qaida terrorist cells.)
4. In September of 2000, PNAC, sensing a GOP victory in the upcoming presidential
election, issued its white paper on “Rebuilding
America’s Defenses: Strategy, Forces and Resources for the New Century.”
The PNAC report was quite frank about why the U.S. would want to move
toward imperialist militarism, a Pax Americana, because with the Soviet
Union out of the picture, now is the time most “conducive to American
interests and ideals... The challenge of this coming century is to preserve
and enhance this ‘American peace’.” And how to preserve
and enhance the Pax Americana? The answer is to “fight and decisively
win multiple, simultaneous major-theater wars.”
In serving as world “constable,”
the PNAC report went on, no other countervailing forces will be permitted
to get in the way. Such actions “demand American political leadership
rather than that of the United Nations,” for example. No country
will be permitted to get close to parity with the U.S. when it comes to
weaponry or influence; therefore, more U.S. military bases will be established
in the various regions of the globe. (A post-Saddam Iraq may well serve
as one of those advance military bases.) Currently, it is estimated that
the U.S. now has nearly 150 military bases and deployments in different
countries around the world, with the most recent major increase being
in the Caspian Sea/Afghanistan/Middle East areas.
5. George W. Bush moved into the White House in January of 2001. Shortly
thereafter, a report by the Administration-friendly Council on Foreign
Relations was prepared, “Strategic
Energy Policy Challenges for the 21st Century,” that advocated
a more aggressive U.S. posture in the world and called for a “reassessment
of the role of energy in American foreign policy,” with access to
oil repeatedly cited as a “security imperative.” (It’s
possible that inside Cheney’s energy-policy papers—which he
refuses to release to Congress or the American people—are references
to foreign-policy plans for how to gain military control of oilfields
abroad.)
6. Mere hours after the 9/11
terrorist mass-murders, PNACer Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld ordered his
aides to begin planning for an attack on Iraq, even though his intelligence
officials told him it was an al-Qaida operation and there was no connection
between Iraq and the attacks. “Go
massive,” the aides’ notes quote him as saying. “Sweep
it all up. Things related and not.” Rumsfeld leaned heavily on the
FBI and CIA to find any shred of evidence linking the Iraq government
to 9/11, but they weren’t able to. So he set up his own fact-finding
group in the Pentagon that would provide him with whatever shaky connections
it could find or surmise.
7. Feeling confident that all plans were on track for moving aggressively
in the world, the Bush Administration in September of 2002 published the
“National
Security Strategy of the United States of America.” The official
policy of the U.S. government, as proudly proclaimed in this major document,
is virtually identical to the policy proposals in the various white papers
of the Project for the New American Century and others like it over the
past decade.
Chief among them are: 1) the
policy of “pre-emptive” war—i.e., whenever the U.S.
thinks a country may be amassing too much power and/or could provide some
sort of competition in the “benevolent hegemony” region, it
can be attacked, without provocation. (A later corollary would rethink
the country’s atomic policy: nuclear weapons would no longer be
considered defensive, but could be used offensively in support of political/economic
ends; so-called “mini-nukes” could be employed in these regional
wars.) 2) international treaties and opinion will be ignored whenever
they are not seen to serve U.S. imperial goals. 3) The new policies “will
require bases and stations within and beyond Western Europe and Northeast
Asia.”
In short, the Bush Administration
seems to see the U.S., admiringly, as a New Rome, an empire with its foreign
legions (and threat of “shock&awe” attacks, including
with nuclear weapons) keeping the outlying colonies, and potential competitors,
in line. Those who aren’t fully in accord with these goals better
get out of the way; “you’re either with us or against us.”
Summary & The PNAC
Future
Everyone loves a winner, and
American citizens are no different. It makes a lot of people feel good
that we “won” the battle for Iraq, but in doing so we paid
too high a price at that, and may well have risked losing the larger war
in the Arab/Muslim region: the U.S. now lacks moral stature and standing
in much of the world, revealed as a liar for all to see (no WMDs in Iraq,
no connection to 9/11, no quick handing-over the interim reins of government
to the Iraqis as initially promised), destruction of a good share of the
United Nation’s effectiveness and prestige, needlessly alienating
our traditional allies, infuriating key elements of the Muslim world,
providing political and emotional ammunition for anti-U.S. terrorists,
etc.
Already, we’re talking
about $80 to $100 billion from the U.S. treasury for post-war reconstruction
in Iraq. And the PNACers are gearing up for their next war: let’s
see, should we move first on Iran or on Syria, or maybe do Syria-lite
first in Lebanon?
One can believe that maybe PNAC sincerely believes its rhetoric—that
instituting U.S.-style “free-markets” and “democratically-elected”
governments in Iraq and the other authoritarian-run countries of the Islamic
Middle East will be good both for the citizens of that region and for
American interests as well—but even if that is true, it’s
clear that these incompetents are not operating in the world of Middle
Eastern realities.
These are armchair theoreticians—most
of whom made sure not to serve in the military in Vietnam—who truly
believed, for example, that the Iraqis would welcome the invading U.S.
forces with bouquets of flowers and kisses when they “liberated”
their country from the horribleness of Saddam Hussein’s reign. The
Iraqis, by and large, were happy to be freed of Saddam’s terror,
but, as it stands now, the U.S. military forces are more likely to be
engulfed in a political/religious quagmire for years there, as so many
of the majority Shia population just want the occupying soldiers to leave.
And yet PNAC theorists continue
to believe that remaking the political structure of the Middle East—by
force if necessary, although they hope the example of what the U.S. did
to Iraq will make war unnecessary—will be fairly easy.
These are men of big ideas,
but who don’t really think. They certainly don’t think through
what takes place in the real world, when the genies of war and religious
righteousness are let out of the bottle. For example, as New York Times
columnist Tom Friedman recently put it, the U.S. had no Plan B for Iraq.
They did great with Plan A, the war, but when the Saddam government collapsed,
and with it law and order, and much of the population remained sullen
and resentful towards the U.S., they had no prepared way of dealing with
it. An embarrassing three weeks went by, with no progress, finally leading
the Bush Administration to force out its initial administrators and to
put in another team to have a go at it.
No, friends, the PNAC boys
are dangerous ideologues playing with matches, and the U.S. is going to
get burned even more in years to come, unless their hold on power is broken.
The only way to accomplish this, given the present circumstances, is to
defeat their boss at the polls in 2004, thus breaking the HardRight momentum
that has done, and is doing, such great damage to our reputation abroad
and to our country internally, especially to our Constitution and economy.
We don’t need an emperor,
we don’t need huge tax cuts for the wealthy when the economy is
tanking, we don’t need more “pre-emptive” wars, we don’t
need more shredding of constitutional due process. Instead, we need leaders
with big ideas who are capable of creative thinking. We need peace and
justice in the Middle East (to help alter the chemistry of the soil in
which terrorism grows), we need jobs and economic growth at home, and
we need authentic and effective “homeland security” consistent
with our civil liberties. In short, we need a new Administration, which
means that we need to get to serious work to make all this change happen.
Organize!, organize!, organize!
Copyright 2003 by Bernard
Weiner
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