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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Win Smith who wrote (77247)2/24/2003 6:34:38 PM
From: Win Smith  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Inside The Secret War Council cnn.com

[ One more Perle backgrounder from last summer. I think this was posted here at the time. It seems maybe a little understated in retrospect. Or maybe Perle really has no influence, who can say? Somehow, though, if Perle really had no influence, I doubt that his fellow neocons would be off playing the "anti-semitic" card big time on his behalf ]

By Mark Thompson

If you could slip past the soldiers toting M 16s at the door, the Pentagon's 17 miles of corridors might remind you a little of an inner-city apartment building: every other door is plastered with alarms, fortified latches and ugly combination locks.

You would buzz past signs bearing mysterious acronyms--WELCOME ABOARD J3/SMOO--that blur rather than clarify what's cooking behind those doors. Asked what goes on inside, officers get that "Don't ask, don't tell" look--and don't even reply.

So it was alarming when one secret agency's work spilled into the open recently, only to be dismissed by almost everyone involved. Meeting last month in Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's private conference room, a group called the Defense Policy Board heard an outside expert, armed only with a computerized PowerPoint briefing, denounce the Saudis for being "active at every level of the terror chain, from planners to financiers, from cadre to foot soldier, from ideologist to cheerleader." Such claims have been on the rise since Sept. 11, when 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudis. Relatives of those killed in the attacks filed suit last week seeking $1 trillion from, among others, three Saudi princes who allegedly gave money to groups supporting the terrorists. But the Pentagon briefer's solution to the Saudi problem was provocative in the extreme: Washington should declare the Saudis the enemy, he said, and threaten to take over the oil wells if the kingdom doesn't do more to combat Islamic terrorism. "I thought the briefing was ridiculous," a board member said, "a waste of time, and the quicker he left the better." When the briefing leaked to the press, it sent diplomatic tremors ricocheting to Riyadh.

This is the kind of outside-the-Pentagon-box thinking that routinely takes place inside the Defense Policy Board, the Secretary's private think tank in a building where helmets often trump thinking caps. Chaired by Richard Perle--a Reagan Pentagon official whose hard-line views won him the title "Prince of Darkness"--the board gives its 31 unpaid members something every Washington player wants: unrivaled access without accountability. Perle uses his post as a springboard for his unilateralist, attack-Iraq views to try to whip the Bush Administration into action. But despite its name, the board does not make policy. As the Saudi episode shows, it can do something far scarier: give a false impression of it.

That wasn't the point when the Pentagon set up the board in 1985 to advise the Defense Secretary on key issues of the day. Unlike many of the department's ancillary agencies, it toils in the shadows. Its classified sessions combine outsiders' briefings with internal discussions on military deep-think. Is the Pentagon buying the right weapons? Is the U.S. cozying up to the right nations? Is the U.S. military pivoting properly in the wake of Sept. 11? Each member's access to top-secret U.S. intelligence gives the board's opinions a cachet not enjoyed by Washington's public think tanks, which churn out reports on such topics.

Beneath the brass plating, the board's impact is harder to discern. Though its quarterly, two-day sessions take place in Rumsfeld's inner sanctum, the board's two full-time employees run the operation from another floor. Perle sets the agenda and briefers. The members take no votes, do not strive to reach a consensus and write no reports. Instead, they wrap up each session sharing what they have learned with Rumsfeld, who is free to ignore what he is told.

Rumsfeld has given some of the Republican right's most outspoken (and forsaken) hawks a place to nest. Among them: former Vice President Dan Quayle, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and ex-CIA and Pentagon boss James Schlesinger. True, there are also centrist Republican members, like Henry Kissinger. But the board has an undeniably hard-nosed tilt: seven of the 31 members have ties to the conservative Hoover Institution at Stanford University. Previous boards had at least a few members with views sharply opposed to the incumbent Administration--Perle was on the board through Clinton's two terms--but this one lacks Democratic firepower. The sprinkling of Democrats includes token moderates and those, like former CIA chief James Woolsey, who are hawks within their own party.

In effect, the board has become Perle's podium. It rarely achieved any notice before he assumed the chairmanship last year, but now his position there lends weight to his public pronouncements. His recent column in the London Daily Telegraph titled "Why the West Must Strike First Against Saddam Hussein" identified him as "chairman of the Defence Policy Board."

But board members, serving at Rumsfeld's pleasure, are like a choir preaching to the pastor. The board "is just another p.r. shop for Rumsfeld," says Michael O'Hanlon, a defense expert with the Brookings Institution. "It gives his ideas more currency." O'Hanlon admits, though, that he would "jump at the chance" to serve on it for the access to the nation's top Defense officials. But Lawrence Korb, a Reagan-era Pentagon official, thinks the board is "a net loss for the Administration because many people think it represents the Administration's views."

That's why when Perle invited Laurent Murawiec, a senior Rand Corp. analyst, to give a briefing on the kingdom, it stirred up such a fuss. "I didn't know what he was going to say, but he had done some serious research on Saudi Arabia," Perle told TIME. In fact, Murawiec's work for Rand has not focused on Saudi Arabia.

Perle's ignorance of Murawiec's talking points matched his unfamiliarity with his briefer's past. Back in the 1980s, Murawiec worked for political extremist and perpetual presidential aspirant Lyndon LaRouche as an editor of LaRouche's magazine, Executive Intelligence Review. By the end of last week, LaRouche was denouncing both his former associate and "suspected Israeli agent Richard Perle" for pushing the U.S. toward war with the Islamic world.

None of Murawiec's arguments were relayed to Rumsfeld, Perle said last week from his vacation home in France. While Perle considers such unvarnished views important "to stimulate discussion," he points out that the board also received a more mainline briefing from U.S. intelligence officials.

When the substance of Murawiec's briefing leaked to the Washington Post, U.S. officials tried to pretend it had never happened. Rumsfeld dismissed it as the musings of "a French national, a resident alien," and Secretary of State Colin Powell phoned the Saudi Foreign Minister to calm down his government. Rand issued a statement distancing itself from its analyst's comments. Murawiec wasn't talking.

Rumsfeld made clear last week that despite the Saudi embarrassment, he values the board's advice. "I have always benefited from a competition of ideas," he said. But in a Pentagon known for marching in lockstep to Rumsfeld's orders, the surreal Saudi briefing left some thinking that Perle's board should focus next on picking its targets--and the weapons used against them--more wisely.



To: Win Smith who wrote (77247)2/24/2003 8:09:39 PM
From: JohnM  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Now I feel really stupid, up until around the time I posted #reply-18475078 I really, honestly didn't even know Perle was Jewish.

Too funny.



To: Win Smith who wrote (77247)2/25/2003 4:10:32 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
Moscow and Berlin fall in line with Chirac

By Jo Johnson in Paris and Haig Simonian in Berlin
The Financial Times
Published: February 24 2003 20:23

Russian and German backing for Monday night's French memorandum to the Security Council on UN weapons inspections in Iraq is a coup for French foreign policy and the personal diplomacy of President Jacques Chirac.

The memorandum states: "To render possible a peaceful solution, inspections should be given the necessary time and resources."

However, it continues: "They can not continue indefinitely. Iraq must disarm. Its full and active co-operation is necessary. This must include the provision of all the additional and specific information on issues raised by the inspectors as well as compliance with their requests."

The restatement of the Paris-Berlin-Moscow axis and commitment to further inspections appears to set three of the most influential Security Council members on a very different path from the US, UK and Spain, whose draft resolution was concurrently circulated to Security Council members and potentially sets the scene for war.

However, diplomats observed that the memorandum could serve as the basis for an eventual French "exit strategy" if Iraq failed to comply with the benchmarks set.

Monday's events marked the climax of a week of feverish diplomatic activity by Mr Chirac, who travelled to Berlin to seek Chancellor Gerhard Schröder's support for the inspections plan.

French foreign minister Dominique de Villepin told the newspaper Le Figaro: "In addition to reinforcing the inspections, the aim of the memorandum is to define concrete criteria by which to measure disarmament. Inspections are producing good results and can ultimately achieve the disarmament of Iraq."

A French foreign ministry spokeswoman yesterday said the memorandum was not an ultimatum and that there would be no end-date attached to the timetable. "We are still in the logic of inspections, which are achieving results, rather than a logic of war," she said.

Mr Schröder, before his meeting with Mr Chirac, said: "We are with France of the opinion that within the bounds of [November's UN resolution] 1441 we have enough possibilities to support the progress that the inspectors are making. That is why, at the current time - that is the common position - a new resolution is not necessary."

Monday's memorandum builds on a "non-paper" circulated to the Security Council by France earlier this month, calling for a tripling of the number of inspectors and UN guards to "freeze" suspected weapons sites, and more spy plane overflights.

Mr Chirac also spoke by telephone on Monday to Russian President Vladimir Putin. The two men confirmed "the closeness of the positions of Russia and France, based on the priority of political-diplomatic methods of resolving the Iraq problems," the Kremlin said.

Monday night's meeting between the French and German leaders, part of regular informal consultations, came as Mr Schröder repeated Germany's strict anti-war position on Iraq.

Mr Schröder, who exploited the Iraq crisis in last year's election campaign, has come to depend closely on French support for his controversial position. As relations with Washington have grown icier, the chancellor has co-ordinated ever more closely with Mr Chirac.

Many German diplomats privately deplore the fact that their government has left itself no exit strategy, should the Security Council back military action. They also recognise the danger of isolation should France, which has not excluded the use of force, change its approach.

Joschka Fischer, the German foreign minister, will travel to London on Tuesday to brief Jack Straw, his British opposite number, and Tony Blair on the Franco-German talks.

news.ft.com