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Re: It's the Oil, Stupid!

by "Mr.SmartyPants" <georgewkspam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jul 10, 2008 at 05:10 PM

In article <48743112.3090601@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
 Dan Clore <clore@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:

> News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo
> 
> http://tinyurl.com/65nohn
> It's the Oil, stupid!
> BY NOAM CHOMSKY
> 8 July 2008
> 
> The deal just taking shape between Iraq's Oil Ministry and four Western 
> oil companies raises critical questions about the nature of the US 
> invasion and occupation of Iraq -- questions that should certainly be 
> addressed by presidential candidates and seriously discussed in the 
> United States, and of course in occupied Iraq, where it appears that the

> population has little if any role in determining the future of their 
> country.
> 
> Negotiations are under way for Exxon Mobil, Shell, Total and BP -- the 
> original partners decades ago in the Iraq Petroleum Company, now joined 
> by Chevron and other smaller oil companies -- to renew the oil 
> concession they lost to nationalisation during the years when the oil 
> producers took over their own resources. The no-bid contracts, 
> apparently written by the oil cor****ations with the help of U.S. 
> officials, prevailed over offers from more than 40 other companies, 
> including companies in China, India and Russia.
> 
> "There was suspicion among many in the Arab world and among parts of the

> American public that the United States had gone to war in Iraq precisely

> to secure the oil wealth these contracts seek to extract," Andrew E. 
> Kramer wrote in The New York Times.
> 
> Kramer's reference to "suspicion" is an understatement. Furthermore, it 
> is highly likely that the military occupation has taken the initiative 
> in restoring the hated Iraq Petroleum Company, which, as Seamus Milne 
> writes in the London Guardian, was imposed under British rule to "dine 
> off Iraq's wealth in a famously exploitative deal."
> 
> Later re****ts speak of delays in the bidding. Much is happening in 
> secrecy, and it would be no surprise if new scandals emerge.
> 
> The demand could hardly be more intense. Iraq contains perhaps the 
> second largest oil reserves in the world, which are, furthermore, very 
> cheap to extract: no permafrost or tar sands or deep sea drilling. For 
> US planners, it is imperative that Iraq remain under U.S. control, to 
> the extent possible, as an obedient client state that will also house 
> major U.S. military bases, right at the heart of the world's major 
> energy reserves.
> 
> That these were the primary goals of the invasion was always clear 
> enough through the haze of successive pretexts: weapons of mass 
> destruction, Saddam's links with Al-Qaeda, democracy promotion and the 
> war against terrorism, which, as predicted, sharply increased as a 
> result of the invasion.
> 
> Last November, the guiding concerns were made explicit when President 
> Bush and Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki signed a "Declaration of 
> Principles," ignoring the U.S. Congress and Iraqi parliament, and the 
> populations of the two countries.
> 
> The Declaration left open the possibility of an indefinite long-term 
> U.S. military presence in Iraq that would presumably include the huge 
> air bases now being built around the country, and the "embassy" in 
> Baghdad, a city within a city, unlike any embassy in the world. These 
> are not being constructed to be abandoned.
> 
> The Declaration also had a remarkably brazen statement about exploiting 
> the resources of Iraq. It said that the economy of Iraq, which means its

> oil resources, must be open to foreign investment, "especially American 
> investments." That comes close to a pronouncement that we invaded you so

> that we can control your country and have privileged access to your 
> resources.
> 
> The seriousness of this commitment was underscored in January, when 
> President Bush issued a "signing statement" declaring that he would 
> reject any congressional legislation that restricted funding "to 
> establish any military installation or base for the purpose of providing

> for the permanent stationing of United States Armed Forces in Iraq" or 
> "to exercise United States control of the oil resources of Iraq."
> 
> Extensive resort to "signing statements" to expand executive power is 
> yet another Bush innovation, condemned by the American Bar Association 
> as "contrary to the rule of law and our constitutional separation of 
> powers." To no avail.
> 
> Not surprisingly, the Declaration aroused immediate objections in Iraq, 
> among others from Iraqi unions, which survive even under the harsh 
> anti-labour laws that Saddam instituted and the occupation preserves.
> 
> In Wa****ngton propaganda, the spoiler to US domination in Iraq is Iran. 
> U.S. problems in Iraq are blamed on Iran. US Secretary of State 
> Condoleezza Rice sees a simple solution: "foreign forces" and "foreign 
> arms" should be withdrawn from Iraq -- Iran's, not ours.
> 
> The confrontation over Iran's nuclear programme heightens the tensions. 
> The Bush administration's "regime change" policy toward Iran comes with 
> ominous threats of force (there Bush is joined by both US presidential 
> candidates). The policy also is re****ted to include terrorism within 
> Iran -- again legitimate, for the world rulers. A majority of the 
> American people favours diplomacy and opposes the use of force. But 
> public opinion is largely irrelevant to policy formation, not just in 
> this case.
> 
> An irony is that Iraq is turning into a US-Iranian condominium. The 
> Maliki government is the sector of Iraqi society most sup****ted by Iran.

> The so-called Iraqi army -- just another militia -- is largely based on 
> the Badr brigade, which was trained in Iran, and fought on the Iranian 
> side during the Iran-Iraq war.
> 
> Nir Rosen, one of the most astute and knowledgeable correspondents in 
> the region, observes that the main target of the US-Maliki military 
> operations, Moktada Al Sadr, is disliked by Iran as well: He's 
> independent and has popular sup****t, therefore dangerous.
> 
> Iran "clearly sup****ted Prime Minister Maliki and the Iraqi government 
> against what they described as 'illegal armed groups' (of Moktada's 
> Mahdi army) in the recent conflict in Basra," Rosen writes, "which is 
> not surprising given that their main proxy in Iraq, the Supreme Iraqi 
> Islamic Council dominates the Iraqi state and is Maliki's main backer."
> 
> "There is no proxy war in Iraq," Rosen concludes, "because the U.S. and 
> Iran share the same proxy."
> 
> Teheran is presumably pleased to see the United States institute and 
> sustain a government in Iraq that's receptive to their influence. For 
> the Iraqi people, however, that government continues to be a disaster, 
> very likely with worse to come.
> 
> In Foreign Affairs, Steven Simon points out that current US 
> counterinsurgency strategy is "stoking the three forces that have 
> traditionally threatened the stability of Middle Eastern states: 
> tribalism, warlordism and sectarianism." The outcome might be "a strong,

> centralised state ruled by a military junta that would resemble" 
> Saddam's regime.
> 
> If Wa****ngton achieves its goals, then its actions are justified. 
> Reactions are quite different when Vladimir Putin succeeds in pacifying 
> Chechnya, to an extent well beyond what Gen. David Petraeus has achieved

> in Iraq. But that is THEM, and this is US. Criteria are therefore 
> entirely different.
> 
> In the US, the Democrats are silenced now because of the supposed 
> success of the US military surge in Iraq. Their silence reflects the 
> fact that there are no principled criticisms of the war. In this way of 
> regarding the world, if you're achieving your goals, the war and 
> occupation are justified. The sweetheart oil deals come with the
territory.
> 
> In fact, the whole invasion is a war crime -- indeed the supreme 
> international crime, differing from other war crimes in that it 
> encomp***** all the evil that follows, in the terms of the Nuremberg 
> judgment. This is among the topics that can't be discussed, in the 
> presidential campaign or elsewhere. Why are we in Iraq? What do we owe 
> Iraqis for destroying their country? The majority of the American people

> favour US withdrawal from Iraq. Do their voices matter?
> 
> Noam Chomsky's writings on linguistics and politics have just been 
> collected in "The Essential Noam Chomsky," edited by Anthony Arnove, 
> from the New Press. Chomsky is emeritus professor of linguistics and 
> philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge,
Mass.

and;


http://au.youtube.com/watch?v=EbxD55LnlGg


July 17, 2003
The Guardian (UK)
The Spies Who Pushed for War
Shadow rightwing intelligence network set up in Wa****ngton to 
second-guess the CIA and deliver
a justification for toppling Saddam Hussein by force

  by Julian Borger

     The agency, called the Office of Special Plans (OSP), was set up by 
the defence secretary,
Donald Rumsfeld, to second-guess CIA information and operated under the 
patronage of hardline
conservatives in the top rungs of the administration, the Pentagon and 
at the White House,
including Vice-President Dick Cheney.

     The ideologically driven network functioned like a shadow 
government, much of it off the
official payroll and beyond congressional oversight. But it proved 
powerful enough to prevail
in a struggle with the State Department and the CIA by establi****ng a 
justification for war. . . .

     The OSP was an open and largely unfiltered conduit to the White 
House not only for the
Iraqi opposition. It also forged close ties to a parallel, ad hoc 
intelligence operation inside
Ariel Sharon's office in Israel specifically to bypass Mossad and 
provide the Bush
administration with more alarmist re****ts on Saddam's Iraq than Mossad 
was prepared to authorise.

     FULL TEXT

     ---
     Michael Lind, "Israel Lobby Distorts U.S. Foreign Policy," Prospect 
Magazine, April 2002

     "Whose War? Israel's Say Jewish Writers," The Wisdom Fund, March 
12, 2003

     [But the argument [installing a new regime in Iraq will foster the 
spread of democracy]
has been pushed hardest by a group of officials and advisors who have 
been the leading
proponents of going to war with Iraq. Prominent among them are Paul D. 
Wolfowitz, the deputy
defense secretary, and Richard Perle, --Greg Miller, "Democracy Domino 
Theory 'Not Credible',"
Los Angeles Times, March 14, 2003]

     [Woolsey, one of the most high-profile hawks in the war against 
Iraq and a key member of
the Pentagon's Defence Policy Board, is a director of the 
Wa****ngton-based private equity firm
Paladin Capital. . . .

     An influential member of the Pentagon's Defence Policy Board, Perle 
is managing partner of
venture capital company Trireme, which invests in companies dealing in 
products of value to
homeland security.--Antony Barnett and Solomon Hughes, "Bush ally set to 
profit from the war on
terror," Guardian, May 11, 2003

     Bernard Weiner, "How We Got Into This Imperial Pickle: A PNAC 
Primer," Information
Clearing House, May 28, 2003

     Simon English, "Cheney had Iraq in sights two years ago," Telegraph 
(UK), July 22, 2003

     Jack Shafer, "The Times Scoops That Melted: Cataloging the wretched 
re****ting of Judith
Miller," Slate, July 25, 2003

     Jerry Kroth, "Who Forged the Letters that Sucked Us into War? 
Israel, Yellowcake and the
Media," CounterPunch, August 2, 2003

     William Pierce, "Mossad and the Jewish Problem," National Alliance, 
August 2003

     [The Office of Special Plans (OSP), which worked alongside the Near 
East and South Asia
(NESA) bureau in Feith's domain, was originally created by Defense 
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
and Deputy Secretary Paul Wolfowitz to review raw information collected 
by the official U.S.
intelligence agencies for connections between Iraqi President Saddam 
Hussein and al-Qaeda.

     Retired intelligence officials from the State Department, the 
Defense Intelligence Agency
(DIA), and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) have long charged that 
the two offices
exaggerated and manipulated intelligence about Iraq before passing it 
along to the White House.

     But key personnel who worked in both NESA and OSP were part of a 
broader network of
neo-conservative ideologues and activists who worked with other Bush 
political appointees
scattered around the national-security bureaucracy to move the country 
to war, according to
retired Lt Col Karen Kwiatkowski, who was assigned to NESA from May 2002 
through February
2003.--Jim Lobe, "Pentagon Office Home to Neo-Con Network," Inter Press 
Service, August 7, 2003]

     [Most neocons share unwavering sup****t for Israel, . . . The 
original neocons were a small
group of mostly Jewish liberal intellectuals . . .--"Neocon 101," 
Christian Science Monitor,
August 27, 2003]

     [IILG appears to be part of a carefully-constructed network aimed 
at channelling business
into Iraq.

     Interestingly, the firm's website is not registered in Salem 
Chalabi's (nephew of Ahmed
Chalabi) name but in the name of Marc Zell, whose address is given as 
Suite 716, 1800 K Street,
Wa****ngton. That is the address of the Wa****ngton office of Zell, 
Goldberg &Co, which claims to
be "one of Israel's fastest-growing business-oriented law firms", and 
the related FANDZ
International Law Group.

     The unusual name "FANDZ" was concocted from "F and Z", the Z being 
Marc Zell and the F
being Douglas Feith. The two men were law partners until 2001, when 
Feith took up his Pentagon
post as undersecretary of defence for policy.--Brian Whitaker, "Friends 
of the family,"
Guardian, September 24, 2003]

     Sidney Blumenthal, "Bush and Blair - the betrayal," Guardian, 
November 14, 2003

     "General: Israelis exaggerated Iraq threat," AP, December 4, 2003

     Julian Borger, "Israel trains US assassination squads in Iraq," 
Guardian (UK), December 9,
2003

     VIDEO: "The Lie Factory - How the Neocons & the Office of Special 
Plans Pushed
Disinformation and Bogus Intelligence on Iraq," Democracy Now, December 
18, 2003

     Mark Thompson, "Paul Wolfowitz: The godfather of the Iraq war," 
Time, December 21, 2003

     [The liberation of Iraq, in the neocon scenario, would be followed 
by a democratic Iraq
that would quickly recognize Israel. This, in turn, would "snowball" - 
the analogy only works
in the Cedar Mountains of Lebanon - through the region, bringing 
democracy from Syria to Egypt
and to the sheikhdoms, emirates and monarchies of the Gulf.

     All these new democracies would then embrace Israel and hitch their 
backward economies to
the Jewish state's advanced technology.--Arnaud de Borchgrave, "Iraq and 
the Gulf of Tonkin,"
Wa****ngton Times, February 12, 2004]

     [In 1996, in a strategy paper crafted for Israel's Bibi Netanyahu, 
Richard Perle, Douglas
Feith and David Wurmser urged him to "focus on removing Saddam Hussein 
from power" as an
"Israeli strategic objective." Perle, Feith, Wurmser were all on Bush's 
foreign policy team on
9-11.

     - In 1998, eight members of Bush's future team, including Perle, 
Wolfowitz and Rumsfeld,
wrote Clinton urging upon him a strategy that "should aim, above all, at 
the removal of Saddam
Hussein."

     - On Jan. 1, 2001, nine months before 9-11, Wurmser called for 
U.S.-Israeli attacks "to
broaden the (Middle East) conflict to strike fatally ... the regimes of 
Damascus, Baghdad,
Tripoli, Teheran and Gaza ... to establish the recognition that fighting 
with either the United
States or Israel is suicidal."

     "Crises can be op****tunities," added Wurmser.

     On Sept. 11, op****tunity struck.

     On Sept. 15, according to author Bob Woodward, Paul Wolfowitz spoke 
up in the War Cabinet
to urge that Afghanistan be put on a back burner and an attack be 
mounted at once on Iraq,
though Iraq had had nothing to do with 9-11. Why Iraq? Said Wolfowitz, 
because it is "doable."

     On Sept. 20, 40 neoconservatives in an open letter demanded that 
Bush remove Saddam from
power, "even if evidence does not link Iraq directly to the (9-11) 
attack." Failure to do so,
they warned the president, "would constitute an early and perhaps 
decisive surrender in the war
on international terrorism."--Patrick J. Buchanan, "Have the Neocons 
Killed a Presidency?,"
Antiwar.com, February 16, 2004]

     "Pentagon offices face probe on Iraq claims," Reuters, February 19, 
2004

     [The fact that so many of the authors of this war are Jewish is not 
im****tant. That they
uncritically fit the alien shroud of Israeli far-right expansionist 
policy over American
security policy is. They sup****ted Chalabi so recklessly because he 
promised to immediately
open relations between Iraq and Israel and begin piping oil to 
Israel.--Georgie Anne Geyer,
"THE TRUTH ALWAYS COMES OUT IN THE WASH," Universal Press Syndicate, 
February 20, 2004]

     [They wanted to put in a government friendly to the U.S., and they 
wanted permanent basing
in Iraq. . . .

     Almost a billion dollars has been spent - a billion dollars! - by 
David Kay's group to
search for these WMD, a total whitewash effort. They didn't find 
anything, they didn't expect
to find anything. . . .

     The last reason is the conversion, the switch Saddam Hussein made 
in the Food for Oil
program, from the dollar to the euro. He did this, by the way, long 
before 9/11, in November
2000 - selling his oil for euros.--Marc Cooper, "Soldier for the Truth: 
Exposing Bush's
talking-points war," L.A. Weekly, February 20 - 26, 2004]

     Stephen Green, "Serving Two Flags : Neo-Cons, Israel and the Bush 
Administration,"
CounterPunch, February 28, 2004

     [It has been im****tant ever since Bush took office in January 2001 
for the administration
to downplay any connection between Israel and the war against Iraq. 
Obfuscating the "Israeli
motive" of the war was almost certainly one of the reasons the 
administration so transparently
exaggerated first Iraq's possession of weapons of mass destruction and, 
more recently,
Wa****ngton's desire for democracy in Iraq.--Bill Christison, "Faltering 
Neo-Cons Still
Dangerous," CounterPunch, March 5, 2004]

     Ed Blanche, "Neocons at work: Israel gets its 1st slice of Iraqi 
pie," The Daily Star,
March 17, 2004

     Emad Mekay, "9/11 Commission Director: Iraq War Launched to Protect 
Israel," Antiwar.com,
March 30, 2004

     [Powell felt Cheney and his allies - his chief aide, I. Lewis 
"Scooter" Libby, Deputy
Defense Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz and Undersecretary of Defense for 
Policy Douglas J. Feith
and what Powell called Feith's "Gestapo" office - had established what 
amounted to a separate
government -- William Hamilton, " Bush began to plan war three months 
after 9/11," Wa****ngton
Post, April 17, 2004]

     [A U.S. senator's charge that Israel is behind the Bush 
administrations's decision to
invade Iraq has rattled American Jewish leaders.--"Senator spoke for 
many on Hill when he
blamed Israel for war," WorldTribune.com, May 20, 2004]

     Justin Raimondo, "Senator Hollings Is Right: It's all about 
Israel," CounterPunch, May 21,
2004

     [Zinni is talking about a group of policymakers within the 
administration known as "the
neo-conservatives" who saw the invasion of Iraq as a way to stabilize 
American interests in the
region and strengthen the position of Israel. They include Deputy 
Defense Secretary Paul
Wolfowitz; Undersecretary of Defense Douglas Feith; Former Defense 
Policy Board member Richard
Perle; National Security Council member Eliot Abrams; and Vice President 
Cheney's chief of
staff, Lewis "Scooter" Libby. --"Gen. Zinni: 'They've Screwed Up'," CBS 
News May 21, 2004]

     [Israeli intelligence and military operatives are now quietly at 
work in Kurdistan,
providing training for Kurdish commando units and, most im****tant in 
Israel's view, running
covert operations inside Kurdish areas of Iran and Syria. Israel feels 
particularly threatened
by Iran, whose position in the region has been strengthened by the war. 
The Israeli operatives
include members of the Mossad, Israel's clandestine foreign-intelligence 
service, who work
undercover in Kurdistan as businessmen and, in some cases, do not carry 
Israeli
pass****ts.--Seymour M. Hersh, "As June 30th approaches, Israel looks to 
the Kurds," The New
Yorker, June 21, 2004]

     Peter Bergen, "Did one woman's obsession take America to war?," 
Guardian, July 5, 2004

     [Mr Feith's cell undermined the credibility of CIA judgments on 
Iraq's alleged al-Qa'eda
links within the highest levels of the Bush administration.

     The cell appears to have been set up by Mr Feith as an adjunct to 
the Office of Special
Plans, a Pentagon intelligence-gathering operation established in the 
wake of 9/11 with the
authority of Paul Wolfowitz.--Julian Coman, "Fury over Pentagon cell 
that briefed White House
on Iraq's 'imaginary' al-Qaeda links," Telegraph (UK), July 11, 2004]

     [Cooperation between Israel and the United States helped produce a 
series of intelligence
failures in the lead up to the Iraq war, according to separate re****ts 
issued by members of the
Senate and the Knesset.--Ori Nir, "Senate Re****t on Iraq Intel Points to 
Role of Jerusalem,"
The Forward, July 14, 2004]

     Ray McGovern, "The Iraq War and Israel: How 9/11 Re****t 
Soft-Pedaled Root Causes,"
CounterPunch, July 28, 2004

     Patrick J. Buchanan, "Where the Right Went Wrong: How 
Neoconservatives Subverted the
Reagan Revolution and Hijacked the Bush Presidency," Thomas Dunne Books 
(September 1, 2004)

     Bob Drogin and Greg Miller, "Israel Has Long Spied on U.S., Say 
Officials," Los Angeles
Times, September 3, 2004

     Eric Margolis, "FBI painting ugly picture," Toronto Sun, September 
5, 2004

     [Retired general Anthony Zinni, a former chief of the U.S. Central 
Command and
presidential Middle East envoy, told CBS in May that "the worst-kept 
secret in Wa****ngton" was
that the neoconservatives pushed the war in Iraq for Israel's 
benefit.--Marc Perelman, "Neocons
Blast Bush's Inaction On 'Spy' Affair," The Forward, September 10, 2004]

     [The weapons of mass destruction disinformation that was fed to the 
president and to the
American public came directly from Shulsky's shop. . . .

     Wurmser, Perle and Feith were the principal authors of the 1996 
100-day policy plan for
incoming Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu. None ever registered under 
the Foreign Agents
Registration Act for this work.

     That plan, "A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm," 
published by Israel's
Institute for Advanced Strategic and Political Studies, has served as 
the guiding road map for
the neocons both in Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's office and in 
the Bush
administration.--Anonymous, "The State Department's extreme makeover," 
Salon, October 4, 2004]

     [It was nice to see the White House finally pull the plug on the 
transparent scheme of the
neo-cons to smear U.N. General Secretary Kofi Annan over the alleged 
"oil-for-food
scandal."--Jude Wanniski, "Another Neo-Con Imperial Plot," Wanniski.com, 
December 8, 2004]

     [The neocons would have you believe that having a nuclear power 
plant - even one whose
operation is subject to IAEA Safeguards, like Iran's - is tantamount to 
having a plutonium-239
implosion nuke.--Gordon Prather, "Virtual Nukes," Antiwar.com, December 
11, 2004]

     [In 1996, some of the people in Perl's circle had begun to think 
about what it would mean
for Saddam Hussein to be removed from the Middle East scene. They 
concluded that it would be
very good for Israel. . . . the group was pleased enough with its work 
to send the paper to the
newly elected Israeli primime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. "A Clean 
Break: A new Strategy for
Securing the Realm" called for Israel to free itself both from socialist 
economic policies and
the burdens of the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. Instead of 
retreating from occupied lands

in exchange for dubious promises of peace, Wurmser wrote, Israel should 
take the fight to the
Palestinians and their Arab backers--George Paker, "The Assassins Gate: 
America in Iraq,"
Farrar, Straus and Giroux (October 15, 2005) p. 30]

     [Libby was among those associated with the Project for a New 
American Century, a think
tank that publicly urged President Clinton to use military force to 
remove Hussein from
power.--Bryan Bender, "Indictments put focus on neoconservatives," 
Boston Globe, October 29, 2005]

     [Republican elder statesman, Gen Brent Scowcroft, national security 
advisor to Bush's
father, accused Bush Jr of being 'wrapped around the little finger' of 
Israel's PM Ariel
Sharon.--Eric Margolis, "AMERICANS ARE RUNNING OUT OF PATIENCE WITH 
THEIR 'WAR PRESIDENT',"
ericmargolis.com, November 14, 2005]

     [Mylroie had been pu****ng for an all-out war against Iraq for a 
decade. In the run-up to
the first Gulf war, Mylroie, along with the recently fired New York 
Times re****ter Judith
Miller, wrote a book titled, "Saddam Hussein and the Crisis in the 
Gulf."--Evelyn J. Pringle,
"Laurie Mylroie's War: Bush Gang Swore Saddam was Behind 9/11 in 
Lawsuit," counterpunch.org,
November 16, 2005]

     Gary Leupp, "A Neocon Plan to Plant WMDs?," counterpunch.org, 
January 14, 2006

     [Other special-interest groups have managed to skew foreign policy, 
but no lobby has
managed to divert it as far from what the national interest would 
suggest, while simultaneously
convincing Americans that US interests and those of the other country Ð 
in this case, Israel Ð
are essentially identical.--John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt, "The 
Israel Lobby and U.S.
Foreign Policy," London Review of Books, March 23, 2006]

     [Khaled Salih, a spokesman for the Kurdistan Regional Government, 
says: "These are not new
allegations for us. Back in the sixties and seventies we were called 
'the second Israel' in the
region and we were supposed to be eliminated by Islamist nationalist and 
now Islamist
groups.--Mark Urban, "Kurdish soldiers trained by Israelis," BBC 
Newsnight, september 19, 2006]

     [ . . . they were out at Kennebunk****t, and Bush Jr. says, "Can I 
ask you a question?
What's a neocon?" And the father says, "Do you want names or a 
description?" The President
says, "I'll take a description." He says, "I'll give it to you in one 
word: Israel,"--Andrew
Cockburn, "Donald Rumsfeld: His Rise, Fall, and Catastrophic Legacy," 
democracynow.org, March
7, 2007]

     [I discovered that Michaels and his associates were part of an 
effort by the Kurds and
their allies to lobby the West for greater power in Iraq, and greater 
clout in Wa****ngton, and
at the same time, by a group of Israeli ex security officials to 
rekindle good relations with
their historical allies the Kurds through joint infrastructure, economic 
development, and
security projects.--Laura Rozen, "Kurdistan's Covert Back-Channels: How 
an ex-Mossad chief, a
German uberspy, and a gaggle of top-dollar GOP lobbyists helped 
Kurdistan snag 15 tons of $100
bills," Mother Jones, April 12, 2007]

     [Bush's "war on terror" is a hoax that serves to cover U.S. 
intervention in the Middle
East on behalf of "greater Israel."--Paul Craig Roberts, "What the Iraq 
War Is About,"
antiwar.com, April 23, 2008]

     "THE ARCHITECTS OF WAR: WHERE ARE THEY NOW?," thinkprogress.org ]


http://www.twf.org/News/Y2003/0722-Spies.html
-- 
If guns are  out-lawed. Only the Out-laws & politicians will have guns.
 




 2 Posts in Topic:
It's the Oil, Stupid!
Dan Clore <clore@[EMAI  2008-07-08 20:31:30 
Re: It's the Oil, Stupid!
"Mr.SmartyPants"  2008-07-10 17:10:32 

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