Donald
Trump, Picks Top Iraq Hawk as Security Adviser
By Alex
Emmons, Naomi LaChance
September
13, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept"
-
Donald Trump
named former CIA director and extremist
neoconservative James Woolsey his senior adviser on
national security issues on Monday. Woolsey, who
left the CIA in 1995, went on to become one of
Washington’s most outspoken promoters of U.S. war in
Iraq and the Middle East.
As such,
Woolsey’s selection either clashes with Trump’s
noninterventionist rhetoric — or represents a pivot
towards a more muscular, neoconservative approach to
resolving international conflicts.
Woolsey, by
contrast, was a key member of the Project for the
New American Century — a neoconservative think tank
largely founded to encourage a second war with Iraq.
Woolsey signed a
letter in 1998 calling on Clinton to depose
Saddam Hussein and only hours after the 9/11 attacks
appeared on
CNN and blamed the attacks on Iraq. Woolsey has
continued to insist on such a
connection despite the complete lack of evidence
to support his argument. He also blames Iran.
Weeks
before the invasion of Iraq, Woolsey
called for broader war in the Middle East,
saying “World War IV” was already underway.
Woolsey has
also put himself in a position to profit from the
wars he has promoted. He has served as vice
president of Pentagon contracting giant Booz Allen,
and as
chairman of Paladin Capital Group, a private
equity fund that invests in national security and
cybersecurity.
He
chairs the leadership council at the Foundation
for the Defense of Democracies, a hawkish national
security nonprofit, and is a
venture partner with Lux Capital Management,
which invests in emerging technologies like
drones,
satellite imaging, and
artificial
intelligence.
Woolsey
went on CNN on Monday and said that he was
principally motivated to support Trump because of
his plans to expand U.S. military spending.
Trump gave
a
speech last week in which he proposed dramatic
expansions of the Army and Marines, and
hundred-billion-dollar weapons systems for the Navy
and Air Force. He offered no justification — aside
from citing a few officials who claimed they wanted
more firepower.
Woolsey
stood by Trump’s proposal on Monday.
“I think
the problem is her budget,” Woolsey said of Trump’s
opponent, Hillary Clinton. “She is spending so much
money on domestic programs — including ones that we
don’t even have now, and the ones we have now are
underfunded — I think there can be very little room
for the improvements in defense and intelligence
that have to be made.”
Woolsey has
previously
called for NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden to
be “hanged by the neck until he’s dead, rather than
merely electrocuted.”
In the
past, Woolsey has publicly disagreed with Trump on a
number of national security issues — including
Trump’s plan to
ban Muslim immigration. On Monday, Woolsey told
CNN that such a plan would raise First Amendment
issues, but that he supported a temporary
immigration block from certain Muslim countries.
Thus far,
at least, most prominent war hawks have found they
had more in common with Clinton than Trump. “I would
say all Republican foreign policy professionals are
anti-Trump,” leading neoconservative Robert Kagan
told a group in July.
Ray McGovern Debates James Woolsey On Iraq War -
Charlie Rose - Audio Only - 8/20/2004
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