Selling ‘Peace Groups’ on US-Led Wars
Since the anti-war
protests on Vietnam, the U.S. government
has made “perception management” of the
American people a high priority, feeding
them a steady diet of propaganda about
foreign crises, even getting “peace
groups” to buy into “pro-democracy” wars
By Margaret Sarfehjooy
and Coleen Rowley
December 26, 2014 "ICH"
- "Consortium
News" - “War is
peace” double-speak has become commonplace
these days. And, the more astute foreign
policy journalists and commentators are
beginning to realize the extent of
how “liberal interventionists” work in sync
with neocon warhawks to produce and
sustain a perpetual state of U.S. war.
More and more “peace and
social justice” groups are even being
twisted into “democracy promotion,” U.S.
militarism style. But rarely do we get a
window to see as clearly into how this
Orwellian transformation occurs as with
the “Committee in Solidarity with the People
of Syria” (CISPOS) based in Minnesota’s Twin
Cities, a spin-off of “Friends for a
Nonviolent World” (FNVW), steering its
Quaker-inspired founding in nonviolence to
promote speakers and essayists with strong
ties to the violent uprising to topple the
Syrian government of President Bashar
al-Assad, resulting in a war that has
already taken some 200,000 lives.
Do the real pacifist
members approve? Or even know?
Middle Eastern expats who
support U.S. intervention in their countries
are especially effective in promoting their
message to Western audiences because they
provide “proof” of the demonization of
governments that the U.S. plans to invade
and dominate, and often peace groups include
these expats in presentations believing them
to be representatives of an entire country.
In Minneapolis, FNVW and
its spin-off CISPOS hosted several events
with Syrian expats who were on record as
supporting the U.S. bombing of their
country. (This isn’t only happening in the
U.S. In April 2011, a Vancouver peace
group documented its objection to the fact
that other Canadian “peace” groups were
sponsoring speakers who justified and
advocated “in
favour of the NATO bombing of Libya.”)
Often Syrian “experts”
speaking to peace groups, such as FNVW/CISPOS’s
upcoming speaker, Mohja Kahf, have ties to
the early destabilization of Syria. This
American Prospect article documents how
Najib Ghadbian, Kahf’s husband of over 20
years (apparently up to last year when they
divorced) was one of the Syrian dissidents
who attended the early 2006 meeting with Liz
Cheney (then-Vice President Dick Cheney’s
daughter), along with other Syrian
dissidents to plan how to destabilize Syria
and topple its government. Like some Syrian
version of Ahmed Chalabi, the neocons’
choice to run post-invasion Iraq, Kahf’s
husband apparently got himself invited to
Liz Cheney’s “Iran-Syria Operations Group”
by having signed the “Damascus Declaration”
in 2005, the year before.
When Najib and Mohja sat
down for a long 2011
interview with The Arkansas Traveler,
they discussed their involvement with the
Syrian Revolution, even joking about
Ghadbian becoming the next Prime Minister. Kahf
and Ghadbian reportedly divorced in 2013 but
when CISPOS-FNVW first published her long
essays, they were still appearing together
at Syrian revolutionary meetings and
speaking forums. Additionally, CISPOS’s
latest handout (December 2014) lists
Ghadbian’s organization,
www.etilaf.us (The National Coalition of
Syrian Revolutionary Forces) as a resource
“For More Information on Syria and How to
Help.”
Resources for information
on Syria often come from “citizen
journalists” with deep ties to neocons and
U.S. government sources. From the
State Department’s website , the $330
million in support for the Syrian opposition
includes training for networks of citizen
journalists, bloggers and cyber-activists to
support their documentation and
dissemination of information on developments
in Syria.
Syrian dissidents received
funding from the Los Angeles-based Democracy
Council, which ran a Syria-related program
called the “Civil Society Strengthening
Initiative”
funded with $6.3 million from the State
Department. The program is described as
“a discrete collaborative effort between the
Democracy Council and local partners” to
produce, among other things, “various
broadcast concepts.”
James Prince, the founder
and President of the Democracy Council, is
also an adviser to
CyberDissidents.org , a project created
in 2008 by the Jerusalem-based Adelson
Institute for Strategic Studies, founded and
funded by Sheldon Adelson, a patron and
confidant of Benjamin Netanyahu.
Other resources include
postings on social media and alternative
websites with sensational stories such as
the anti-Assad activist “Gay
Girl in Damascus” who turned out to be a
middle-aged American man in Scotland or
Syrian Danny Abdul Dayem, who was frequently
interviewed using fake
gun fire and flames in his interviews.
With all of the
information about Syria, what are we to
believe as true? We know the facts about
recent U.S. interventions in Middle Eastern
countries. Why would Syria be any different?
Afghanistan is still in
shambles with the majority of the people
living in extreme poverty; Libya, which had
the highest GDP per capita and life
expectancy on the continent, is now a failed
state; Western intervention transformed Iraq
from an emerging country with moderate
prosperity into an impoverished country with
a starving population. In the lead-up to
each intervention, “experts” emerged to
explain that while anti-imperialism is good
in general and in past scenarios, this time
is different. Is it?
Isn’t it time for
war-weary Americans to wise up and
stop falling for these pretexts of bringing
democracy and human rights to foreign
countries through training and funding of
“color (and umbrella) revolutions,” inciting
of coups and regime changes and eventually,
through U.S.-NATO military might?
Liberal interventionists
clearly assist neocon warhawks towards their
mutual goal of “full spectrum dominance”
under the euphemistic guise of Pax
Americana. Only the “Pax” always turns out
to be endless war and occupation.
Margaret Sarfehjooy is an
anti-war activist and registered nurse in
Minnesota. Coleen Rowley is a retired FBI
agent and former Minneapolis Division legal
counsel.