Community > Posts By > Oceans5555
Jerry, I too am shying away from connecting the government to complicity
with Sept 11. I think Sept 11 happened for several understandable reasons, but that the neocons, already seized with their agenda to 'protect' Israel, used Sept 11 to panic the American people and their President into carrying out as much of their agenda as possible. Virutally everything I described int he posts above comes from now open sources. The Democrats don't make a big deal of it because they too have their own neocon problem: Indyk and Ross, for example were in senior positions under Clinton. Most poltiicians, republican or democrat, are still reluctant to confront AIPAC (the Israeli lobby) or the fact that Israel is now viewed as among the top three intelligence threats to the US. A few politicians have, and they have immediately been targetted by AIPAC. A few academics, like Norman Finkelsetin, have taken on AIPAC, and have as a result been hounded by pro-Israeli contributors to their instituions, including being denied tenure. It is not a thing of which we can be proud. Oceans |
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Andrea, not at all, and they aren't nagging -- they enrich the issues we
are trying to understand. I was hoping that I was responding to some of them in my postings on Jerry's queries. This really is a situation where more brains are better tahn one, and with you in Ireland and Jerry in Malta, andothers elsewhere, it helps bring different perspectives to the discussion, to say nothing about our different histories and areas of interest. I just refuse to send flowers to Jerry. Oceans |
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PeekaBoo, are you threatening a member of JSH?
I hope not and look forward to your response. Oceans |
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Morning, Andrea!
Jerry is running my ass off.... I'm a sucker for good questions, I know! Oceans |
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Jerry, a couple more notes re. your last post.
A. Powell was isolated and omitted deliberately from the briefings that were arranged for Bush through Rice, Rumsfeld and Cheney's offices. Tenet briefed the Pres and a small group of senior officials including Powell each morning, but this is on the raw intelligence that came in overnight, and served as an early warning for everyone on what the latest flashpoint were. The briefings that I talked about in my last post are those that addressed policy issues and were prepared as decision-support documents for Bush. It is from these briefings that Powell was excluded. Rice was in earlier days a 'mentee' of Powell's, but she cut him loose when the neocons came to dominate the White House and moved against Powell and the State department. It caused a deep rupture in what had been a fairly close friendship, and left a lot of people disgusted with Rice personally. B. You are right: very little is being to 'fix' the situation structurally. In part this is because Bush and the neocons are viewed as an aberration in US history. Generally, it is felt that the way intel has been handled has been pretty good, though not perfect, of course. The thinking is that when a President comes into power who with his team (however it comes about) who is bent on taking the US to extreme positions and is willing to exploit the natural trust of the American people in their president to carry out actions that are against the interests of the US -- the thinking is that there is little that can be done to stop him. So people are hunkered down, stalling the President's greatest blunders to the extent they can, and counting down to the moment he leaves office, and those left behind have to undertake the massive job of rebuilding the US and undoing the harm that the Bush people have done. It is my hope that they will be held accountable, but the country is so exhausted dealing with their actions that they may be given a free pass. Whew! Oceans |
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Jerry, you are raising some very important questions. I'll try and
answer, to the extent that I know the answers... I am drawing here on the several accounts and studies that have been published in the last couple of years. I can post a list of them if anyone wants. Problems with the accurate flow of intel, associated with the Iraq run-up. 1. The Bush administration was and is laced with senior neocon folks. (I posted a list of them earlier today in one of these threads.) These are the people who invented 'evidence' and sold it to whoever would listen: the public, the media, Congress, etc. All of this is documented. 2. Within the intelligence community, the reality of what was going on regarding Iraq, Sept 11, Israel, etc. seems to have been accurately known by the analysts, who wrote often excellent findings and summaries on all this. 3. There was a major effort on the part of the neocons to influence the official findings of the intel community. They were sometimes able to do this (especially when Hadley, Libby, Rumsfeld and Cheney came down on them). Tenet was not up to the job of protecting his analysts and seeing to it that the best intel actually got put before the president and congress. Sometimes he did his job, at other times he bent, and at other times he caved in. 4. Intel briefings for the president were first presented to the NSC (Rice and Hadley) and Cheney (and to Libby). These all made sure that the briefings were changed if they did not reflect the neocon line, so that in the end the president only heard the neocon line. 5. Separately, we know that Cheney and to some extent Rice played to Bush's personal insecurities and stiffened him when it came to 'fighting them'. Rumsfeld wanted to make a big splash after 9/11, and was pretty much ready to lash out at anyone, it didn't much matter. For instance, he decided that attacking Afghanistan was 'not enough.' So all the key people around Bush were pushing the neocon line or the 'bash the evil ones' line. Powell was the only senior person saying that those lines were nonsense, and so Cheney, Rumsfeld and Rice isolated Powell, with the help of the neocons at the State Department, most notably John Bolton. 6. Bush's isolation was, and is, so great that even his father cannot get through. His father has been demonized by the neocons as the guy who failed to complete the job in Iraq, and so relations between the two bushes are extremely strained. They do not talk politics any more, at Barbara Bush's insistence, so as not to ruin their family vacations. 7. There can be no doubt that by temperament Bush has major flaws that played into this: he is a fairly ignorant person and not a curious one. He surrounds himself with people who will make him feel good about himself. He is a recovering alcoholic (who may have fallen off the wagon recently) and drug user, and has a frail ego. The President has learned to deliver lines in public that makes him appear strong, determined, unwavering, etc. and views this as being Presidential. The problem is that it also makes him easy to manipulate, and, I believe, this is what has happened. 8. Slowly, Washington is fighting back against the dominance of the neocons. Peter Pace has been fired, as well as his Number Two. Patraeus has been put in to Iraq, though nothing cannot be done to 'win' -- if it ever could. The 'war coordinator' has essentially said that we have lost. Congress, Democrats and Republicans are now rebelling, slowly! against the White House. 9. It is all over for the neocons and for the US occupation of Iraq. But the neocons are still in power, and they still have Bush as their mouthpiece, and Cheney, with David Wurmser now doing the neocon dirty work in Cheney's office is still in there stiffening Bush's sense of himself. Gates is doing his best and as an excellent bureaucratic in-fighter is gradually returning the DoD to some semblance of sanity and accountability. Elliott Abrams, perhaps the darkest figure in the neocon ranks, is Bush's advisor on the Middle East, and recently Rice appointed another, Eliott Cohen, to be her Middle East advisor. So while 'everyone' now realizes the neocon vision was toxic and harmful to the US, the reality is that there is still a struggle going in Washington for control of US foreign policy. But this is better than 3-6 years ago, when it was totally dominated by the neocons and their critics in disarray. In the same way that supporters of Israel call critics of Israel anti-Semitic, so the neocons branded the critics of the global view unpatriotic. Oceans |
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A couple of quick notes, Philosopher.
1. When Congress did hold hearings on the Bush run-up to invading Iraq, adminsitration officials lied to Congress on what was going on and one what the evidence was. For example, the officials (from DoD, CIA, etc.) said that Iraq had WMD, had participated int he attack on Sep 11, had an active nuclear weapons program, etc. So it was impossible for Congress, which relies of those who brief it on what is going to tell the truth (which is why they have closed door- and classified briefings). The Congress has no independent intelligence capability. They do have a fine analysis office (the Congressional Research Service), but this office is dependent on the raw informationthey are given by the Executive branch -- the Bush people. Having said that, it seems clear to me that anyone with judgment or any knowledge of the Middle East should have challenged the run-up: it didn't hold water internally. But I think the panic and fear that seized the American people after 9/11 and which was encouraged by the administration and the neocons cerated such an atmosphere that it was difficult for everyone, including Congress, to seriously challenge the neocon statements. 2. You are right about Zarqawi: he came to prominence AFTER the US invasion, and as a leader of a group fighting the US occupation. He is often associated with al-Qaida, and called his group several things including 'Al-Qaida in Iraq', but his relations with al-Qaida were at best stormy. Al-Qaida's leadership broke with Zarqawi when he started fomenting Sunni-Shi'i strife, publically rebuking him. Oceans |
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Hello, everyone!
As the neocons take their last swing under the Bush administration at Muslim/Arab countries -- all in the delusion that it will protect Israel -- we can expect the Bush administration to continue its 'run-up' against Iran. 'Run-up' is the neocon term for it: a campaign of disinformation coming out of the neocon media outlets and with statements from Cheney and Bush as the big artillery. (There was some earlier confusion in one or two of the postings in this thread about the term 'neocon.' It stands for neo-conservative, and is a term that the neocons use for themselves. Most prominently the neocons are: Paul Wolfowitz, Scooter Libbey, David Wurmser, Meyrav Wurmser, Doug Feith, John Bolton, James Woolsey, Michael Ledeen, Norman Podhorets, Bill Kristol, Charles Krauthammer, Elliott Abrams, Steven Handley, Laurie Mylroie, Dennis Ross, Martin Indyk, Bernard Lewis, Samual Hintington, Francis Fukuyama (though he has now denounced his fellow neocons), etc. They were long active before Bush became president, and they are all first and foremost loyal to Israel.) I do not see Bush as a neocon, but as a mouthpiece for them. Rice seems to waffle between being one and not. Powell was not, which is why they isolated him from Bush. Cheney, to me , is an enigma when it comes to being a neocon or not. He espouses neocon views, but I think he may be following an agenda of his own that has nothing to do with Israel. I wish I knew more about him and his views and motives. At least we know that he has served as one of the largest liars about the invasion of Iraq and is now doing it again in the anti-Iranian run-up. But WHY he is doing this is unclear to me. But with the removal of the senior military commanders who were most to blame for being yes-men to the neocons regarding Iraq, with the debacle in Iraq now fully evident, with the looming debacle in Afghanistan just starting to show up on the American public's radar screen, and with the growing realization that Iran poses no threat with its nuclear power activities, the neocons are left with little ammunition with which to fuel the run-up. The thing they are pushing now is that Iran is supporting the Iraqi fight for liberation against US occupation. But the reality is that this aid is tenuous at best, and minor in any case. Iraq is a beehive of explosives and personal weapons thanks to the dispersal of the Iraqi military depots as the US invaded. The US has found and seized only a trivial portion of these supplies. Since the US invasion, the Iraqis have improved the weapons and tactics for deploying them. The only real indication we have that ran has helped the Iraqi resistence is that some of the designs of the latest versions of IEDs seem to have come from Iran. But it is unclear whether this is an Iranian governmental effort, or that of individual Iranians who sympathize with the Iraqi resistence. In any case, it does not add up to anything near a cause for war with Iran. The neocons have shown, of course, that they are willing to say just about anything to get the US government to go to war, and there is no reason to think that they are acting in better faith now. But we know enough from their bahavior on the 'run-up' against Iraq to look with great suspicion on anything they say or Bush say about Iran. Let's not be taken in a second (or is it 3rd?) time by the neocons. Oceans |
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Hi, Fanatic
Good to see you posting more here. Tons of books are now out on how the Bushies not only twisted intelligence but out and out invented it. David Isikoff's book is one (I woinder if he is related to your Michale Isikoff). Tom Ricks, Woodward etc are all providing more and more information of the grand deception carried out by Cheney and Bush and the neocons. It is a shameful period in our country's life. To say nothing of the immense harm that hass been done to others in our country's name. Oceans |
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The Passia maps are pretty good. I just looked at each one, and their
accuracy seems good. The only one I would argue a bit with is the Sykes-Picot. Seeveral versions have been drawn up. The text of the Sykes-Picot agreement is available, but it did not come with a map, so the maps that purport to show what the Agreemetn was about are all interpretive and not integral to the Agreement. I hadn't seen the Passia map on the percentage of Palestinian and Jewish and public land ownership just prior to the Israeli conquest of 1948. I had studied the Mandatory numbers (the source for the map), and everyone who has studied the conflict knows that Jewish ownership of land in Paletine was about 7% of the otal, but seeing it displayed visually was helpful. Thanks, Invisible! The maps I was going to poitn Red Wine towards predate the Passia maps, in some cases by hundreds of year, but it seems like his request has been met by these. I still hope he will answer my question about where he came across the notion that no maps showing Palestine as an defined entity exist prior to 1948. Red Wine? Oceans |
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Got it, Keys. Thanks.
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Or "Iroquois Nation", Imkeys?
I am just responding to Red Wine, and waiting for him to answer my question, before I give him the info on the maps. Oceans |
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Topic:
Weapons
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Markers!!!!
Who has seen the movie, LIVES OF OTHERS? Oceans |
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Happy birthday, Queeen! Many happy returns to you.
Oceans |
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Topic:
Happy Birthday SheNerd
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To SheNerd, our hidden beauty!
Happy birthday!!! Oceans |
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Topic:
FANTA'S ........(secret)
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Happy birthday, friend.
Glen, you are a man of honor, curiosity and humor. Our lives and our JSH community is the richer for your presence. Thank you. Oceans |
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Hi, Red Wine,
I'm back at my desk. Before I start listing a few of the maps, I'd like to ask you a question. How did you come to this idea that Palestine as a distinct political entity hasn't existed on maps? |
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Hi, Red Wine!
Quick posting -- I can show you dozens! I'll get back to you with their names and dates. Some of them have been published in a collection of plates of maps of Palestine -- I have it in my library -- and will get you that reference. I'm off to work and will get you the leads later. Oceans |
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Topic:
Weapons
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Alex....
We are here looking at a mirror of the world (or at least the English speaking shard of it). The whole world cries for alignment and progress. Here is one place where we can learn how to give effect to that cry. And we have seen quite a bit of progress, here...no? I'm off! Anybody seen any windmills around? Oceans |
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Topic:
Weapons
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One yesterday, KariZ -- thanks for asking. And a couple of opportunities
coming up today. Of course, these are small victories compared to what is needed. Which is why I am doing some soul searching about what to do with the rest of my life.... I'm not for picking up that fishing pole, but I am also fed up with sacrificing my days to correct the mistakes of too-powerful fools. Or worse, merely trying to correct then. Dedication is not the same as thing as progress, and this distinction gnaws at me. But for now it is back into the trenches. Your friendships, here in this bizarre world agora, brings me strength, and a grateful smile. Oceans |
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