"Negroponte is and always has been a "capo" of the Perle mafia" -- Jude
Wanniski
Negroponte, a Neo-Con? Shocking!!
Jude Wanniski
February 19, 2005
http://uruknet.info/?s1=1&p=9821&s2=20
Memo To: Sen. Joe Biden, Senate Foreign Relations
From: Jude Wanniski
Re: Questions for Negroponte
You may remember, Senator, I posted a memo on the margin to you on
April 27, 2004, when I learned that John Negroponte, the US
Ambassador to the U.N., was nominated to be the U.S. Ambassador to
Iraq. I told you then that, from what I could see, he was a loyal
agent of the megalomaniac neo-con Cabal to run the world, and we
would regret putting him in charge of promoting "democracy" in Iraq.
He was actually "placed" there not by President Bush, but by his real
boss, Richard Perle, to promote a puppet government that would do the
bidding of Perle and his Cabal (Cheney, Wolfie, Rummy, etc.) As I
tried to explain to you back then, Senator, Negroponte came up
through the bureaucratic ranks by doing exactly as he was told by the
neo-cons, and now President Bush has been snookered yet again into
doing the bidding of the Cabal. He has appointed Negroponte to be the
Biggest Cheese of all in the National Intelligence Community, the
CZAR of national intelligence!!!
Negroponte is and always has been a "capo" in the Perle mafia, and
now because he looks "respectable," a public servant who has worked
for both Democratic and Republican presidents, he gets to be King of
the Mountain. Don't be a dope, Senator. It will be still be Perle and
the neo-cons pulling his strings, as they always have. And once he is
confirmed, we are being told he will be President Bush's "primary"
briefer, coming into the Oval Office every morning to tell Mr. Bush
what Richard Perle & Co. want him to hear. Where are the enemies?
Which are the rogue states? Who shall we bomb today?
I'm not sure how the confirmation process is going to work, Senator.
Maybe you will not be able to get a question in edgewise. But as
ranking Democrat on Senate Foreign Relations, you should at least be
able to find out when John Negroponte first met Richard Perle, and
what the occasion was. What I mean to say is this is a good shot at
turning over the rock and finding out what is slithering beneath.
Perle and his pals would like nothing more than to have a few
questions tossed at Negroponte about his role in the Honduras, back
in the Cold War. He probably lied through his teeth, but what the
heck, we were in a Cold War, and I will give him all those lies. But
he was at the U.N. in 2003 when every other diplomat in the world
could see there was no reason to go to war with a toothless Iraq.
Except Negroponte, who showed up every day to say whatever it was in
his instructions from Perle and the neo-con Cabal. Poke around,
Senator.
Here's that old memo I mentioned earlier:
Just Who is John Negroponte?
April 27, 2004
Memo To: Sen. Joe Biden, Senate Foreign Relations
From: Jude Wanniski
Re: John Negroponte = Ahmed Chalabi
Of course the President's nomination of John Negroponte to be U.S.
Ambassador to Baghdad will sail through the confirmation process that
began today. It would normally take weeks at least to get the
Senate's rubber stamp for such a high post in such a delicate
situation, but the way has been greased for Negroponte, the current
UN Ambassador, on the grounds that time's a wastin'. You surely know
the real reason for the short-cut is to deny the many serious
opponents of his nomination a chance to speak their piece, as it
might soon become clear that he is NOT the right man for the job. In
a sense, Negroponte is the foster brother of Ahmed Chalabi, the Iraqi
foster child of Richard Perle, as Negroponte has also climbed the
diplomatic ladder with assistance every step of the way from Perle
and the neo-cons.
Perle continues to control his network -- which controls the Bush
administration's foreign policy, even though Perle had to resign his
16-year post at the Defense Policy Board. So too, Negroponte will be
able to run Iraq as proconsul in the Perle/Wolfowitz/Rumsfeld empire
even if his brother Chalabi gets cut out of the interim government to
be named June 30. I noticed the New York Times this morning finally
took note that Chalabi is not currently in favor at the White House,
which is having trouble explaining why it has invested so much power
and money in a convicted felon who would spend decades in prison if
he ever set foot in Jordan, our erstwhile ally. Never mind, the neo-
cons saw this coming, so they rush-rushed their man Negroponte to the
Ambassador slot. There he can cut through all the red tape that
Chalabi needs cutting in his megadeals in post-war Iraq. That is, if
the there ever is a post-war Iraq.
You were there at the hearings today, Senator, when Andres Thomas
Conteris, a Latin American human-rights activist jumped up in the
audience to denounce Negroponte for the role he played on behalf of
the Cold Warriors when he was ambassador to Honduras during the the
Nicaragua Contra war in the early 1980s. He was detained, removed
from the hearing room, and released elsewhere in the Capitol, but not
before an exchange occurred, which I wonder if we will see in the
papers tomorrow.
At the hearing your Republican colleague Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.)
asked Negroponte if "the sovereign Iraqi government of July 1 would
not have veto authority over military involvement in [a situation
like] Fallujah? ... If they have sovereignty, Mr. Ambassador, what
does that mean? ..." Negroponte responded: "That is why I use the
term 'exercise of sovereignty.' I think in the case of military
activity, their forces will come under the unified command of the
multinational force. That is the plan...." U.S. forces, said
Negroponte, "are going to be free to operate in Iraq as they best see
fit." Situations like Fallujah would have to be the "subject of real
dialogue between our military commanders, the new Iraqi government
and the U.S. Mission as well."
It's here that Conteris spoke up, objecting to such a "dialogue," he
said: "We need to sup****t nonviolence, not the violent polices of the
United States. There is no sovereignty Mr. Ambassador if the U.S.
continues to exercise security. Senators, please ask the ambassador
about Battalion 316. Ask him about a death squad in Honduras that he
sup****ted." Conteris was then removed from the hearing room by the
Capitol Police.
According to the Institute for Public Accuracy, an antiwar outfit in
Wa****ngton, Conteris said later: "I spoke up because Negroponte at
that moment was talking about sovereignty. I lived in Honduras for
five years, I know the impact Negroponte's policies had there in the
early 1980s. At the time Honduras was known as the USS Honduras,
basically an occupied aircraft carrier. Negroponte has been involved
in subverting sovereignty in several other countries: Vietnam, the
Philippines; he worked on Mexico's adoption of NAFTA and tried to
subvert Panamanian control over the canal."
Now I'm not going to get into all that Honduras stuff, Senator. If
you want to refresh yourself, you can read up on it at
http://www.coha.org,
the website of the Council on Hemispheric
Affairs. The fact that we were up to our keisters in the Cold War
back then does excuse a certain amount of trimming, assassinations,
death squads, etc., which we should try to forget about. Indeed, back
then when I was associate editor of The Wall Street Journal editorial
page, I stood shoulder to shoulder with Perle, Wolfowitz and
Rumsfeld, and the rest of the gang. But I broke ranks and became a
dove when the Cold War ended. And as a dove, I have to tell you I
think the Negroponte nomination has a fairly unpleasant odor about
it, which I think the Senate - or at least Senate Democrats - will
come to regret.
News of Negroponte's background and performance in previous wars -
not to mention the yeoman work he did for the Perle Cabal in greasing
the skids for any diplomatic solution at the United Nations last
year - is already making its way through the ranks of Iraqi
insurgents, even as their mosques are bombed in Fallujah. I note
Mubarak Awad, founder of Nonviolence International, another peacenik
outfit, said today: "The appointment of Negroponte is likely to
inflame the outrage of many Iraqis, and rightly so." During the Cold
War, I used to hurl epithets at peaceniks like Awad. But now it seems
I am one of them and I agree that another choice of ambassador would
be much less likely to stoke the jihad underway in Iraq. But if
stoking is what you think necessary, go right ahead, but please don't
come around saying you're sorry it didn't turn out too well when it
doesn't.
If we are going to have any chance of getting out of the mess in
Iraq, we will have to permit an Iraqi government elected next January
to have the right to invite the U.S. military to leave forthwith. It
is Negroponte's job to make sure that does not happen, and we all
know that, don't we?
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