The Neocons’ Project for the New American Century: 'American World
Leadership' – Syria Next To Pay the Price?
by Felicity Arbuthnot
Recently
by Felicity Arbuthnot: The
Assassination of Osama bin Laden: Glaring Anomalies in the Official
Narrative
In
every age it has been the tyrant, the oppressor and the exploiter,
who has wrapped himself in the cloak of patriotism, or religion,
or both to deceive and overawe the people. (Eugene Debs,
1855-1926, speech Canton, Ohio, 16th June 1918.)
The
Project for the New American Century (PNAC), unleashed in June
1997, has largely disappeared from the political radar, yet the
mire, murder and general mayhem the US, UK and dwindling boots
on the ground allies find themselves in, are seemingly rooted
in its aims, which march relentlessly on.
PNAC was founded
under the Chairmanship of William Kristol, former Chief of Staff
to Vice President Dan Quale during the Presidency of George Bush
Snr. Kristols father, Irving Kristol has been described as
the Godfather of Neoconservatism.
The organization
was: ... dedicated to a few fundamental propositions: That
American leadership is good for America and the world. Projects
were devised: ... to explain what American world leadership
entails.
Consulting
the world about the mind-numbing concept of a US planetary
take-over was not a consideration.
Little time
was wasted in advancing this new world order. On 29th May 1998 PNAC
sent a
letter to the then Speaker of the House of Representatives,
Newt Gingrich and to Senate Majority Leader, Trent Lott. It referred
to a letter sent to President Clinton four months earlier: expressing
our concern that U.S policy of containment of Saddam
Hussein was failing. Thus: the vital interests of the
United States and its allies in the Middle East would soon be facing
a threat as severe as any we had known since the end of the Cold
War.
Therefore a
strategy should be implemented to: ... protect the United
States and its allies from the threat of weapons of mass destruction
(and) put in place policies that would topple the Iraqi leadership.
Without a glance
towards international law, the letter continued: .U.S. policy
should have as its specific goal removing Saddam Husseins
regime ... Only the U.S. can (demonstrate) that his rule is not
legitimate. To accomplish (this) the following political and military
measures should be undertaken ... The first measure
to be taken was what has now become the blueprint for each
planned overthrow of a sovereign government:
We
should help establish and support (with economic, political and
military means) a provisional, representative and free government
of Iraq in areas of Iraq not under Saddams control.
That Iraqs
sovereignty and territorial integrity was guaranteed
in law and by the United Nations was not an issue for consideration.
Signatories, a veritable Whose Who of neo-cons, included
John Bolton, Donald Rumsfeld, Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, Robert
Kagan, James Wolsey, Zalmay Khalizad and PNAC co-founder Robert
Kagan.
Robert Kagan
is currently on Hillary Clintons Foreign Policy Advisory Committee,
his wife is Victoria Nuland, spokeswoman for the Clinton headed
U.S. State Department. Kagans loftily entitled book The
World America Made, was publicly endorsed by Barack Obama.Its
theme was referenced in his 2012 State of the Union address.
Nor has William
Kristol gone away. In March 2011 he wrote an editorial in the Weekly
Standard arguing that US Military interventions in Muslim
countries (including the decimations of the 1991 Gulf War, the Balkans,
and destructions and occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq) should
not be classified as invasions but as liberations.
Needless to say, he backed US intervention in Libya,
urging Conservative support.
A more recent
piece of war mongering was on Fox News (7th August 2012) when he
opined:
I went
back and looked at the speech President Obama gave in March 2011
when he announced the very mild intervention in Libya, which did
help to get rid of Qaddafi. Every reason he gave for intervening
in Libya is there squared, in triplicate, for intervening in Syria,
including the strategic importance of getting rid of Assad and
weakening Iran, and were sitting there talking about we
really hope there wont be sectarian violence later on,
and, gee, this is kind of unfortunate.
If
we are abdicating our role of helping to shape events in this
absolutely crucial part of the world, what does that say? Are
we just going to let other countries, ya know, play their games
and stand back as if it doesnt affect U.S. national security?
On the same
programme Hillary Clinton talked of: the day after President
Assad. For anyone familiar with the 1983 film of that name portraying
the effect of a nuclear strike on Missouri, it was a chilling phrase.
So far it is
not known if Kristol and Clinton have connected their perceived
threat to U.S. national security, the spectre of a dead
Ambassador, three colleagues, ten guarding them, burning or under
attack US Embassies around the world, generated by actions, provocations
and invasions, exactly as they advocated again on Fox News.
Before his
next appearance on Fox, Kristol could do worse than peruse Professor
Hamoud Salhis address, presented at the Center for Contemporary
Conflict, of the (U.S.) Naval Postgraduate School in June 2004.
It is entitled: Syrias
Threat to Americas National Interest. It is arguably
even more pertinent now and another reminder of how long
Syria has been in U.S. sights.
He opens: Syrias
threat to Americas national interest in the Middle East can
only be understood in the context of U.S. plans to reconfigure the
Middle East. Knowing now that the motive for invading Iraq was strategic,
taking over Syria would give the United States further strategic
depth in the region ... tipping the balance of power (even more)
in favour of the United States regional allies, Israel and Turkey.
Salhi notes
that strategic pre-emption is long central to American
policy in the Middle East, citing Rapid Deployment Forces during
the Carter Administration, Dual Containment under Clinton, Pre-emptive
Doctrine under George W. Bush. Polices, he holds, which: have
been instrumental in maintaining hegemony in the region, avoiding
threats to U.S interests, or to those of Israel,Turkey and the Gulf
States.
After the 1998
US-UK Christmas bombing of Baghdad drew world-wide criticism, Salhi
points out that the often daily (illegal) bombing of Iraq by the
two countries was stepped up, with often daily sorties, using
the latest technology destroying what minimal economic infrastructure
remained: under the pretext that they represented future threats.
It was he contends, the quiet war, an ongoing tragedy
little noticed by the world.
The ground
was literally being prepared for invasion, the trigger
finger ever itchier, any excuse sought. George W. Bush would later
explain that invading Iraq was necessary: ... to advance
freedom in the greater Middle East ... (Emphasis mine.)
11th September
2001 arguably gave the excuse to release the safety catches. On
20th September 2001 PNAC sent a letter to Bush: ... recommending
the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, even if no direct link to the 9/11
attack were found. Time to redeem American: supremacy
in global politics (and for) regime changes in Iraq, Iran and Syria.
Michael Ledeen,
foreign policy expert, another neo-con minded Fox News commentator,
alleged to be a strong admirer of Niccolo Machiavelli,
regarded 1991s Desert Storm attack on Iraq as a woeful missed
chance states Salhi. He notes Ledeens view that driving Iraqi
troops from Kuwait was wholly inadequate. Strategy should have been:
regime change in Baghdad (as) one piece in an
overall mission, which should have been: one battle
... against Iran, Iraq, Syria and Saudi Arabia.
Addressing
The Syrian Threat, Professor Salhi reminds of the U.S.
Congress 2004 Syria Accountability Act which considerably
financially weakened Syrias fragile economy, with further
aims clearly paving the way to regime change.
That achieved:
...the United States will have completed its final stage of
encircling Iran. This would further tip the regions balance
of power in favour of Israel and ultimately open new doors
for the U.S. active involvement in toppling the Iranian regime.
PNACs
John Bolton, as Under Secretary of State for Arms Control, had testified
before a Senate Sub-Committee on Syrias threats to the U.S.,
which of course included terrorism and weapons of mass destruction
reminds Salhi pointing out that Bolton could cite no specifics.
The more a Syrian danger was inflated, the more justification
for an attack.
Conversely
he reasoned, a massively threatened Syria then: has a motive
to make itself more threatening than it actually is. (On a
personal note his comment had resounding resonance. In an interview
with Iraqs then Foreign Minister Tareq Aziz prior to the invasion,
I asked about the weapons of mass destruction allegations relentlessly
assailing Western air waves . He side- stepped the question neatly:
Madam Felicity, we too are afraid. He of course knew
the truth, Iraq was a sitting duck, but U.S. uncertainty was slender
hope for catastrophe averted.)
In a rare moment
of intemperance, President Assad stated the country had chemical
weapons and would use them if invaded. As Aziz, he would hardly
declare there was no way to counter an invasions fearsome
arsenal.
Concluding,
the Professor pointed out that: Syrias economic capabilities
do not support the argument that Syria could become a threatening
force in the region ... Further, its technological
development falls to near nil as a threat to the United States.
A: lack of interest in the sciences is reflected in patents
registered in the United States, a meager ten, as against 16,328
for Korea and 7,652 for Israel (1980-2000.) Syria has a long way
to go before it could reach any kind of technological development
to be a threat to the United States.
Moreover: Syrias
leadership has pursued a principled foreign policy, built around
deeply rooted philosophical orientations and molded to conform to
the realities of the region.
Whilst ideologically
deeply rooted in Arab nationalism: Syrians political
approach has been consistently pragmatic ... a scenario in which
Syria acquires nuclear, chemical or biological weapons and uses
them against the United States or its regional allies is unlikely.
Further, as
with Iraq, which was minutely scrutinized by US satellites since
the late 1980s (We can see a Coca Cola can in a trash
bin, If Saddam sneezes we can see him reach for his
handkerchief) it is surely happening with Syria, with Israel
also openly admitting to Drone surveillance.
Professor Salhis
final point is that to deter ever mounting threats, Syria might
resort to acquiring WMDs, perceived as for their own protection.
However: What is certain, is that using WMDs would be inconsistent
with Syrias well established political approach.
What is also
certain is that in the event of an attack on Syria, the worldwide
attacks on US and allied interests and personnel of the last few
days will pale in to insignificance.
Essential reading;:
SYRIA:
NATO’s Next “Humanitarian” War?
This article
originally appeared on GlobalResearch.ca.
September
22, 2011
Felicity
Arbuthnot is a frequent contributor to Global
Research.
Copyright ©
2011 Global Research
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