April 14, 2015 "ICH"
- Former Washington insider
and four-star General Wesley Clark spilled the beans several years ago on how
Paul Wolfowitz and his neoconservative co-conspirators implemented their
sweeping plan to destabilize key Middle Eastern countries once it became clear
that post-Soviet Russia “won’t stop us.”
As I recently reviewed a YouTube
eight-minute clip of
General Clark’s October 2007 speech, what leaped out at me was that the neocons
had been enabled by their assessment that – after the collapse of the Soviet
Union – Russia had become neutralized and posed no deterrent to U.S. military
action in the Middle East.
While Clark’s public exposé largely escaped attention in the
neocon-friendly “mainstream media” (surprise, surprise!), he recounted being
told by a senior general at the Pentagon shortly after the 9/11 attacks in 2001
about the Donald Rumsfeld/Paul Wolfowitz-led plan for “regime change” in Iraq,
Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Iran.
This was startling enough, I grant you, since officially the
United States presents itself as a nation that respects international law,
frowns upon other powerful nations overthrowing the governments of weaker
states, and – in the aftermath of World War II – condemned past aggressions by
Nazi Germany and decried Soviet “subversion” of pro-U.S. nations.
But what caught my eye this time was the significance of
Clark’s depiction of Wolfowitz in 1992 gloating over what he judged to be a
major lesson learned from the Desert Storm attack on Iraq in 1991; namely, “the
Soviets won’t stop us.”
That remark directly addresses a question that has troubled me
since March 2003 when George W. Bush attacked Iraq. Would the neocons – widely
known as “the crazies” at least among the remaining sane people of Washington –
have been crazy enough to opt for war to re-arrange the Middle East if the
Soviet Union had not fallen apart in 1991?
The question is not an idle one. Despite the debacle in Iraq
and elsewhere, the neocon “crazies” still exercise huge influence in
Establishment Washington. Thus, the question now becomes whether, with
Russia far more stable and much stronger, the “crazies” are prepared to risk
military escalation with Russia over Ukraine, what retired U.S. diplomat William
R. Polk
deemed a potentially
dangerous nuclear confrontation, a “Cuban Missile Crisis in reverse.”
Putin’s Comment
The geopolitical vacuum that enabled the neocons to try out
their “regime change” scheme in the Middle East may have been what Russian
President Vladimir Putin was referring to in his state-of-the-nation address on
April 25, 2005, when he called the collapse of the Soviet Union “the greatest
geopolitical catastrophe of the [past] century.” Putin’s comment has been a
favorite meme of those who seek to demonize Putin by portraying him as lusting
to re-establish a powerful USSR through aggression in Europe.
But, commenting two years after the Iraq invasion, Putin
seemed correct at least in how the neocons exploited the absence of the Russian
counterweight to over-extend American power in ways that were harmful to the
world, devastating to the people at the receiving end of the neocon
interventions, and even detrimental to the United States.
If one takes a step back and attempts an unbiased look at the
spread of violence in the Middle East over the past quarter-century, it is
difficult to avoid the conclusion that Putin’s comment was on the mark. With
Russia a much-weakened military power in the 1990s and early 2000s, there was
nothing to deter U.S. policymakers from the kind of adventurism at Russia’s soft
underbelly that, in earlier years, would have carried considerable risk of armed
U.S.-USSR confrontation.
I lived in the USSR during the 1970s and would not wish that
kind of restrictive regime on anyone. Until it fell apart, though, it was
militarily strong enough to deter Wolfowitz-style adventurism. And I will say
that – for the millions of people now dead, injured or displaced by U.S.
military action in the Middle East over the past dozen years – the collapse of
the Soviet Union as a deterrent to U.S. war-making was not only a “geopolitical
catastrophe” but an unmitigated disaster.
Visiting Wolfowitz
In his 2007 speech, General Clark related how in early 1991 he
dropped in on Paul Wolfowitz, then Under Secretary of Defense for Policy (and
later, from 2001 to 2005, Deputy Secretary of Defense). It was just after a
major Shia uprising in Iraq in March 1991. President George H.W. Bush’s
administration had provoked it, but then did nothing to rescue the Shia from
brutal retaliation by Saddam Hussein, who had just survived his Persian Gulf
defeat.
According to Clark, Wolfowitz said: “We should have gotten rid
of Saddam Hussein. The truth is, one thing we did learn is that we can use our
military in the Middle East and the Soviets won’t stop us. We’ve got about five
or 10 years to clean up those old Soviet client regimes – Syria, Iran (sic),
Iraq – before the next great superpower comes on to challenge us.”
It’s now been more than 10 years, of course. But do not be
deceived into thinking Wolfowitz and his neocon colleagues believe they have
failed in any major way. The unrest they initiated keeps mounting – in Iraq,
Syria, Libya, Somalia, Lebanon – not to mention fresh violence now in full swing
in Yemen and the crisis in Ukraine. Yet, the Teflon coating painted on the
neocons continues to cover and protect them in the “mainstream media.”
True, one neocon disappointment is Iran. It is more stable and
less isolated than before; it is playing a sophisticated role in Iraq; and it is
on the verge of concluding a major nuclear agreement with the West – barring the
throwing of a neocon/Israeli monkey wrench into the works to thwart it, as has
been done
in the past.
An earlier setback for the neocons came at the end of August
2013 when President Barack Obama decided not to let himself be mouse-trapped by
the neocons into ordering U.S. forces to attack Syria. Wolfowitz et al. were on
the threshold of having the U.S. formally join the war against Bashar al-Assad’s
government of Syria when there was the proverbial slip between cup and lip. With
the aid of the neocons’ new devil-incarnate Vladimir Putin, Obama faced them
down and avoided war.
A week after it became clear that the neocons were not going
to get their war in Syria, I found myself at the main CNN studio in Washington
together with Paul Wolfowitz and former Sen. Joe Lieberman, another important
neocon. As I reported in “How
War on Syria Lost Its Way,” the scene was surreal – funereal, even,
with both Wolfowitz and Lieberman very much down-in-the-mouth, behaving as
though they had just watched their favorite team lose the Super Bowl.
Israeli/Neocon Preferences
But the neocons are nothing if not resilient. Despite their
grotesque disasters, like the Iraq War, and their disappointments, like not
getting their war on Syria, they neither learn lessons nor change goals. They
just readjust their aim, shooting now at Putin over Ukraine as a way to clear
the path again for “regime change” in Syria and Iran. [See Consortiumnews.com’s
“Why
Neocons Seek to Destabilize Russia.”]
The neocons also can take some solace from their “success” at
enflaming the Middle East with Shia and Sunni now at each other’s throats —
a bad thing for many people of the world and certainly for the many innocent
victims in the region, but not so bad for the neocons. After all, it is the view
of Israeli leaders and their neocon bedfellows (and women) that the internecine
wars among Muslims provide at least some short-term advantages for Israel as it
consolidates control over the Palestinian West Bank.
In a Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
memorandum for President
Obama on Sept. 6, 2013, we called attention to an uncommonly candid
report about Israeli/neocon
motivation, written by none other than the Israel-friendly New York Times Bureau
Chief in Jerusalem Jodi Rudoren on Sept. 2, 2013, just two days after Obama took
advantage of Putin’s success in persuading the Syrians to allow their chemical
weapons to be destroyed and called off the planned attack on Syria, causing
consternation among neocons in Washington.
Rudoren can perhaps be excused for her naïve lack of
“political correctness.” She had been barely a year on the job, had very little
prior experience with reporting on the Middle East, and – in the excitement
about the almost-attack on Syria – she apparently forgot the strictures normally
imposed on the Times’ reporting from Jerusalem. In any case, Israel’s priorities
became crystal clear in what Rudoren wrote.
In her article, entitled “Israel Backs Limited Strike Against
Syria,” Rudoren noted that the Israelis were arguing, quietly, that the best
outcome for Syria’s (then) 2 ½-year-old civil war, at least for the moment, was
no outcome:
“For Jerusalem, the status quo, horrific as it may be from a
humanitarian perspective, seems preferable to either a victory by Mr. Assad’s
government and his Iranian backers or a strengthening of rebel groups,
increasingly dominated by Sunni jihadis.
“‘This is a playoff situation in which you need both teams to
lose, but at least you don’t want one to win — we’ll settle for a tie,’ said
Alon Pinkas, a former Israeli consul general in New York. ‘Let them both bleed,
hemorrhage to death: that’s the strategic thinking here. As long as this
lingers, there’s no real threat from Syria.’”
Clear enough? If this is the way Israel’s leaders continue to
regard the situation in Syria, then they look on deeper U.S. involvement – overt
or covert – as likely to ensure that there is no early resolution of the
conflict there. The longer Sunni and Shia are killing each other, not only in
Syria but also across the region as a whole, the safer Tel Aviv’s leaders
calculate Israel is.
Favoring Jihadis
But Israeli leaders have also made clear that if one side must
win, they would prefer the Sunni side, despite its bloody extremists from
Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State. In September 2013, shortly after Rudoren’s
article, Israeli Ambassador to the United States Michael Oren, then a close
adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, told the Jerusalem Post
that Israel favored the Sunni extremists over Assad.
“The greatest danger to Israel is by the strategic arc that
extends from Tehran, to Damascus to Beirut. And we saw the Assad regime as the
keystone in that arc,” Oren said in
an interview. “We always
wanted Bashar Assad to go, we always preferred the bad guys who weren’t backed
by Iran to the bad guys who were backed by Iran.” He said this was the case even
if the “bad guys” were affiliated with Al-Qaeda.
In June 2014, Oren – then speaking as a former ambassador –
said Israel would even
prefer a victory by the Islamic State, which was massacring captured Iraqi
soldiers and beheading Westerners, than the continuation of the Iranian-backed
Assad in Syria. “From Israel’s perspective, if there’s got to be an evil that’s
got to prevail, let the Sunni evil prevail,” Oren said.
Netanyahu sounded a similar theme in his March 3, 2015 speech
to the U.S. Congress in which he trivialized the threat from the Islamic State
with its “butcher knives, captured weapons and YouTube” when compared to Iran,
which he accused of “gobbling up the nations” of the Middle East.
That Syria’s main ally is Iran with which it has a mutual
defense treaty plays a role in Israeli calculations. Accordingly, while some
Western leaders would like to achieve a realistic if imperfect settlement of the
Syrian civil war, others who enjoy considerable influence in Washington would
just as soon see the Assad government and the entire region bleed out.
As cynical and cruel as this strategy is, it isn’t all that
hard to understand. Yet, it seems to be one of those complicated, politically
charged situations well above the pay-grade of the sophomores advising President
Obama – who, sad to say, are no match for the neocons in the Washington
Establishment. Not to mention the Netanyahu-mesmerized Congress.
Corker Uncorked
Speaking of Congress, a year after Rudoren’s report, Sen. Bob
Corker, R-Tennessee, who now chairs the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
divulged some details about
the military attack that had been planned against Syria, while lamenting that it
was canceled.
In doing so, Corker called Obama’s abrupt change on Aug. 31,
2013, in opting for negotiations over open war on Syria, “the worst moment in
U.S. foreign policy since I’ve been here.” Following the neocon script, Corker
blasted the deal (since fully implemented) with Putin and the Syrians to rid
Syria of its chemical weapons.
Corker complained, “In essence – I’m sorry to be slightly
rhetorical – we jumped into Putin’s lap.” A big No-No, of course – especially in
Congress – to “jump into Putin’s lap” even though Obama was able to achieve the
destruction of Syria’s chemical weapons without the United States jumping into
another Middle East war.
It would have been nice, of course, if General Clark had
thought to share his inside-Pentagon information earlier with the rest of us. In
no way should he be seen as a whistleblower.
At the time of his September 2007 speech, he was deep into his
quixotic attempt to win the Democratic nomination for president in 2008. In
other words, Clark broke the omerta code of silence observed by virtually all
U.S. generals, even post-retirement, merely to put some distance between himself
and the debacle in Iraq – and win some favor among anti-war Democrats. It didn’t
work, so he endorsed Hillary Clinton; that didn’t work, so he endorsed Barack
Obama.
Wolfowitz, typically, has landed on his feet. He is now
presidential hopeful Jeb Bush’s foreign policy/defense adviser, no doubt
outlining his preferred approach to the Middle East chessboard to his new boss.
Does anyone know the plural of “bedlam?”
Ray
McGovern works for Tell the Word, a publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of
the Saviour in inner-city Washington. He served for a total of 30 years as an
Army infantry/intelligence officer and CIA analyst and is a member of the
Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS).
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