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[casi] Oh, yeah -- this is gonna work... %(




-------forward: -----

Sent: Thursday, April 10, 2003 8:19 AM
Subject: Fw: a Crook, a Spook, and a Zionist

 ----- Original Message -----
 Sent: Wednesday, April 09, 2003 6:37 PM
 Subject: a Crook, a Spook, and a Zionist

04.08.03 - AUSTIN, Texas -- Oh good.  It looks as though
we're going to have as big a fight over postwar plans for
Iraq as we did over the war itself.  Just what we need,
more of everybody being at everybody else's throat.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who seems prepared to
run the world, favors one Ahmed Chalabi of the Iraqi
National Congress, an exile-emigre group, as postwar
leader (read figurehead-puppet).  Chalabi is bitterly
opposed by both the State Department and the CIA.

According to Knight-Ridder's Jonathan Landay, American
military planes flew Chalabi and 700 troops, the newly
named "First Battalion of Free Iraqi Forces," into
Nasiriyah Sunday to be integrated into Gen.  Tommy Franks'
command.  Landay reports, "Senior administration officials
said that Chalabi had had difficulty recruiting enough
forces to go into southern Iraq and may have tapped the
discredited Badr Brigade, an Iranian-backed Shiite Muslim
group, to get his 700 soldiers.

"Think how happy the Iraqis will be to see some detachment
from their old enemy Iran.  Landay also reports, "It was
information provided by Chalabi that led Rumsfeld and
Wolfowitz to a prewar belief that Iraqis would rise up and
welcome the invading coalition with open arms, that the
Republican Guard would surrender in droves and the
government of Saddam Hussein would crumble in a matter of
days." One hesitates to make sweeping generalizations, but
anyone who has studied the history of emigre groups knows
the endless infighting and delusional quality of the
emigre culture.  (See if you can think of an example.)

This gets better.  Chalabi has been in exile for four
decades and, in 1992, he was convicted on multiple counts
of embezzlement of hundreds of millions of dollars in
Jordan after the failure of his bank there.  He was
sentenced to 22 years in prison.  He escaped from Jordan,
reportedly in the trunk of a car, and wound up in London.
Dick Cheney is also a Chalabi fan.  The Iraqi National
Congress has received millions in American aid money, but
the accounting has been very poor (a familiar story) and
quite a bit of the money is unaccounted for.  Chalabi
favors Savile Row suits.

The Rumsfeld-Wolfowitz choice for "viceroy designate" of
Iraq is Gen.  Jay Garner, head of the Pentagon's Office
for Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance.  Garner is
a retired military man with links to both the
international arms industry and a Jewish lobby group.
After retiring from the Army, Garner became president of
SY Coleman, a defense contractor specializing in military
defense technology.  He is currently on leave of absence
from the company.  The problem of Garner's alleged Zionist
sympathies is also causing talk:  He visited Israel as the
guest of the Jewish Institute for National Security
Affairs and signed a statement in October 2000 blaming the
Palestinian Authority for the violence after the collapse
of peace talks and praising the "remarkable restraint" of
the Israeli army.

The third member of the triumvirate that Rumsfeld & Co.
want to run Iraq is former CIA chief James Woolsey, who
said last week that Iraq is the opening of the "Fourth
World War" (counting the Cold War as III) and that
America's enemies include the religious rulers in Iran,
states like Syria and Islamic terrorist groups.  So, we've
got a crook, a Zionist and an old spy who thinks this is
the beginning of WWIV set to run Iraq.  How lucky can the
Iraqis get?  Is this what we thought we were fighting for?


According to David Sanger's analysis in The New York
Times, "Some hawks in the administration are convinced
that Iraq will serve as a cautionary example of what can
happen to other sates that refuse to abandon their
programs to build weapons of mass destruction, an argument
that John Bolton, the undersecretary of state for arms
control, has made several times in recent speeches." The
administration's more pragmatic wing fears that the war's
lesson will be just the opposite:  that the best way to
avoid American military action is to build a fearsome
arsenal quickly and make the cost of conflict too high for
Washington.

Meanwhile, back at the ranch ...  Sen.  Ted Stevens
suggested last week that New York City's cops and
firefighters should work overtime without pay as a wartime
sacrifice.  "I really feel strongly that we ought to find
some way to convince the people that there ought to be
some volunteerism at home.  Those people overseas in the
desert -- they're not getting overtime.  ...  I don't know
why the people working for the cities and counties ought
to be paid overtime when they're responding to matters of
national security." Stevens, R-Alaska, had just voted for
tax cuts that will give those who make a million dollars a
year $92,000 more to spend on polo ponies.  Some must
sacrifice more than others.

* 2003 Creators Syndicate URL:

ttp://www.workingforchange.com/article.cfm?itemid=14802&CF
ID=6531551&CFTOKE N=79545542



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