Are George W. Bush and his administration pursuing
international policies brought on by forces outside of their
control (i.e., terrorism), or is Team Bush pursuing a
preordained strategy of world domination that would have
gotten underway whether or not 19 hijackers brought down the
twin towers of the World Trade Center?
That is the question that is increasingly being asked by
political outsiders like the U.S. Green Party, a handful of analysts like
Foreign Policy In Focus' Michael T. Klare, and the usual cadre of lefty
intellectuals like Gore Vidal, but not breathed at all by the
president's supposed opponents in Congress, or the purportedly
neutral policy minders in the American media.
The question is important, because if the administration is
simply the vessel through which long-dreamed-of policies of
remaking the world might finally be realized, that fact would
subvert the very idea of American democracy.
A presidential administration is in many ways an era, and
is almost always dubbed as much by historians. That implies
that even as each new administration moves through the
labyrinth of unplanned events, it carries with it the will of
the voters at a moment in history. But if American
presidencies move with neither events nor the will of the
people, they are no better than ideological dictatorships --
the very kind of "secret governments" conspiracy theorists
dream of.
Looking at the professional histories of the men behind
George W. Bush's throne -- the advisors who are shaping his
policies from within the White House and without -- it's easy
to come to the conclusion that this regime is pursuing
policies that stand quite apart from the moments in time
reflected in November, 2000 or even September, 2001, and quite
apart from the will of the vast majority of the American
people.
If the conspiracy theorists are right, the administration
is instead breathing new life into a scheme thwarted in 1992
by the man who, per Lee Atwater's creepy warning in 1991,
dared to "deprive George Bush (Sr.) of a second term." If Bush
Sr.'s war on Iraq was supposed to be the opening salvo in a
war to reshape the Middle East -- and then the world -- in
America's strategic interest, then Bill Clinton's two-term
presidency set back the cause of the New World Order by an
agonizing eight years.
That left the men who dreamed up a New World order to wait
an agonizing near-decade to complete the work of recasting
Arabia as an Americanized outpost of "democracy" -- a friendly
guarantor of America's resource needs and a crucial pivot with
which to leverage American global power. (The drive of these
men and their supporters to return to power casts an even more
sinister light on attempts by anti-Clinton forces to remove
the former president from office.)
Now that they have come in from the cold, the ultra-hawks
of the neoconservative movement -- political veterans Donald
Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz and Condoleezza Rice,
and their extra-governmental think-tank and media cohorts (men
like Richard Perle, Daniel Pipes, Bill Kristol and William
Safire), are pressing their long-hatched agenda from inside
the Bush administration -- or so the conspiracy theory goes.
Their goal is "full spectrum dominance" -- an unchallenged
America sitting astride the world -- controlling its natural
resources and reshaping or replacing governments that don't go
along with the program, and even controlling allies (with
something akin to economic blackmail) in order to prevent a
collusion of would-be equals from growing up in Europe.
The key to getting the program started is Iraq, which as
early as 2000, the Rumsfeld Cabal (conspiracy lingo here,)
were plotting to invade.
The narrative for the plot comes in the form of a report
drawn up in 2000 by the neo-conservative Project for the New
American Century (PNAC), a think-tank peopled by Cheney,
Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Florida Governor Jeb Bush (the
president's brother,) Lewis "Scooter" Libby (Cheney's chief of
staff) and others. The document was entitled Rebuilding America's Defenses: Strategies, Forces
And Resources For A New Century, and it was published in
September 2000 -- a full year before the 9/11 attacks.
The document maps out a "proposed" global strategy for
America in the 21st century -- and its tenets are being
followed almost to the letter by the current Bush
administration.
One of the report's more prescient statements reads: "The
United States has for decades sought to play a more permanent
role in Gulf regional security. While the unresolved conflict
with Iraq provides the immediate justification, the need for a
substantial American force presence in the Gulf transcends the
issue of the regime of Saddam Hussein."
It pointedly asserts that the U.S. should put boots on the
ground in Iraq, even if Saddam Hussein steps down or is
overthrown.
The document also calls for permanently securing American
military-economic preeminence in the world through decisive
U.S. victories in a series of "multiple, simultaneous major
theater wars," beginning with the occupation of Iraq.
It sets forth the "cavalry of the new American frontier,"
with a permanent U.S. military presence in the Gulf region,
including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Iraq.
It warns of a rising Europe and the need to subvert any
collusion of Western states that would create an economic or
military rival to the United States, and it recommends
manipulating allies and undermining the United Nations -- also
characterized as a potential U.S. rival.
It proposes "regime change" not just for Iraq, but Iran and
Syria and for Asian powers like China and North Korea. And it
proposes taking the war to much of the Arab world, in order to
put down any pretensions that those states can keep America
from the oil within their borders.
The plan even calls for the U.S. to consider developing
weapons of mass destruction, including biological weapons.
Much of the world is aware of the plan, and those in Europe
who have read the document (which was rewritten as the Bush
security doctrine last year, supposedly at the behest of
National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice,) have rightly
excoriated it. But the U.S. media has absolutely ignored the
incredible fact of a preexisting plan to invade Iraq
irrespective of the 9/11 tragedy. The American press has
failed in spectacular fashion to investigate the simple, but
critical, question of whether American sentiment,
congressional will and the very Constitution of the United
States -- not to mention international law -- are being
manipulated in order to put in place a plan thought of long
ago by men irresponsive to the democratic will.
Former President Clinton was himself not unacquainted with
think-tankery, and its propensity to inject itself into the
political sphere. Both he and his friend and charge, Tony
Blair (a signatory to Bush's war,) are members of the Council
on Foreign Relations, a group which itself has often been
accused by conspiracy theorists of plotting to take over the
world.
But the scheme, which may well underlie the Bush II regime,
is not about reshaping the world into a concentric circle of
democracies (as the CFR seems bent upon,) nor is it aimed at
putting a stop to ethnic cleansing or other human atrocities
(as the interventions in Kosovo or Somalia purportedly were).
It is about outfitting an unprecedented global empire, and
jack-booting any attempts by rival nations, or free people
anywhere, to do anything about it. It is about reducing
freedom rather than spreading it, and about using allies as
diplomatic shields for the use of preemptive war, first in the
Middle East, and then around the world.
With that as a backdrop, the fecklessness and cowardice of
the U.S. opposition party, the willingness of Congress to
abdicate its constitutional role of checking the presidency,
and the abject failure of the American media to do even the
mildest due diligence as part of the march to war, are not
only shameful, they are dangerous to democracy.
If, of course, you believe in conspiracy theories.
Joy-Ann L. Reid is News Editor, NBC6.net in Miami/Ft.
Lauderdale, Florida.
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