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Politics : WHO IS RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT IN 2004 -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (4196)8/23/2003 11:07:14 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 10965
 
Gen. Clark Steps Up Criticism of Republicans; Presidential Decision Within 3 Weeks; Calls Bush War Rationale 'Deceptive Advertising'

releases.usnewswire.com



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (4196)8/23/2003 11:09:49 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10965
 
Inside Wesley Clark

nwanews.com



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (4196)8/23/2003 11:34:21 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 10965
 
<<...It was not bad enough that terrorists were able to find ways to get into the United States and harm us greatly, we have now set ourselves up on their territory -- as targets...>>

________________________________

IRAQ: A BAIT-AND-SWITCH CON JOB

By Richard Reeves*

richardreeves.com

*RICHARD REEVES is the author of 12 books, including President Nixon: Alone in the White House. He has written for the New York Times, the New Yorker, Esquire and dozens of other publications. E-mail him at rr@richardreeves.com.



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (4196)8/23/2003 3:54:09 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 10965
 
A columnist for the Miami Herald comments on Wesley Clark

_____________________________________________________

The following letter was found posted at:

draftwesleyclark.com

Joy-Ann Reid
pembroke pines
Florida

"An Open Letter To General Clark"

General Clark,

I understand that you are considering a run for president in
2004. I am writing to humbly ask that you do more than
consider it. Many of us who cling to this nation's values,
are watching with alarm as our country -- fresh from an
unprecedented war of preemptive choice, apparently waged
without immediate necessity -- changes into something we
hardly recognize, or recognize all too well.

Many of us watch in frustration and horror as the war
against terror, and against the poverty, hatred and fear
that breed it abroad, and at home, are shoved aside by
ideologues, whose decisions bear not on their own, but on
ordinary people like us. The men and women of our armed
forces are asked to go bravely into suspect wars to satisfy
the old agendas of men who wouldn't even wear the uniform
when they had a chance. And when they come home to their
families, to their sub-standard base housing and sub-par
pay, they face the indignity of discovering that they fall
among the unworthy when it comes time to ease the burden of
taxation on the people they sacrifice their lives to defend.

Meanwhile, many of us struggle to explain to our children
how they can put aside the fear and uncertainty that 9/11
created, while all around them this country is bathed in
fear. We can't find the words to explain secret detentions
and barbed wire camps, the probing eye of government at the
library or on the Internet, the deaths of gung-ho Marines
and Iraqi children and the stoking of war fever with
forgeries and tricks that paint the image of a tin-pot
dictator on the ruins of the Twin Towers. Yes, too many
Americans give only a cursory thought to history or to the
broad strokes of international events. And too many of us
have been eager to believe that the war on terror could be
won by toppling the odd Middle Eastern bad buy or by talking
tough with the Arabs. But many of us, who love this country
and believe in its fundamental mission, believe that there
must be another way.

More to the point, we do not believe in the way chosen by
our current leadership. We find them arrogant, but not wise;
decisive, but not canny; tough but not credible, and we
believe that at this critical moment in history, with so
many wars to be fought and so many lives at stake, that it
is time to ask for new leadership. We don't need a
politician dressed up in a flight suit, landing on the deck
of an aircraft carrier for show. We need someone who has
worn the uniform and smelled the blood on the battlefield,
who can take up the challenge of leading us -- as a nation
-- into battle. We don't need leadership that makes
decisions first and seeks the justifications later, or that
shades the truth to wed us to murky goals. And we don't need
wars of national pride, that truss up our sense of might but
leave us no safer.

We need leadership that can choose America's battles wisely,
then galvanize the nation, and the world, to follow.
Americans are starved for leadership. Why else would so many
close their eyes to the possibility that our government, at
the highest levels, took us to war -- into the most drastic
of acts -- on hype and half-truths? How can so many
Americans not even bother to ask why our soldiers have died?
Maybe it's because after the unprecedented shock of 9/11,
many Americans simply crave to be led, to see their country
do something; to feel that we are not weak, or helpless.
George W. Bush has given us that, but has he given us real
security, true safety from harm? Those of us who believed
that Afghanistan was an appropriate, if scattershot,
response, but that Iraq was a wholly unjustified one, are
now looking into the abyss. We see a population willfully
closing its eyes to the horrible possibility that more than
200 American and British and countless Iraqi lives were
wasted.

We see a pliant press that gently nudges the administration
with one hand while holding the other out to the FCC. We see
an opposition too craven even to demand, under its
constitutional mandate as a co-equal branch of government,
that the president tell congress, let alone the American
people, the truth. And we see an administration so secretive
it would make Orwell blush; seeking four more years to carry
on eviscerating federal services, gutting the environment,
turning the courts into instruments of religious zealotry
and handing out the contents of the national tiller to its
friends in a manner more brazen than anything Taft or Hoover
could have contemplated. For many of us, this is not
leadership; it is nothing short of the undoing of the
American contract.

And so we, who are on the other side of history; are also
hungry for leadership -- for someone we can respect and
believe in. Someone with the experience, intellectual depth
and deft touch to begin healing the wounds this
administration has wrought with our allies, and restoring
America's place as a nation respected and admired, rather
than feared and loathed, by the world. America, today, is
led by men who avoided war themselves, but who are hell bent
on implementing decades-old agendas for which war is the
only outcome. They graft their agenda onto our Fireman's
War. They thrust their ideology upon an untutored president,
a man too eager for history, too hungry for power, too
thirsty for the adulation of battle, and too shallow in
knowledge, to resist. These men defy democracy, they defy
the constitution, and they are leading the current
president, and our nation, in the wrong direction.

As for the Democratic Party, it needs to come to grips with
the reality and sometime necessity of war, and the
responsibility of government to wage it or not, but not to
cower in its shadows and sullenly pass the rifle into the
president's hands. The Democrats need to regain the trust of
the American people. They must prove that they have not just
complaints, but convictions, and that they have the courage
to act on them. They need to convince the mass of us that if
necessary, they have the fortitude to wage just wars, and
the integrity to refuse to wage ideological ones. And so
their nominee in 2004 must be able to demonstrate that he or
she will not shrink from war, but that neither will he
breathlessly accede to it as a matter of political
expediency.

And as much as some of us admire the service of a John
Kerry, the enthusiasm of a John Edwards, the experience of a
Dick Gephardt, the doggedness of a Bob Graham or the pluck
of a Howard Dean, none of these men are breaking through.
None of them is delivering a compelling reason for America
to step back from the brink. Our next president need not be
perfect -- some of us don't demand perfection in all things
-- but he needs to be decisive, intelligent, coherent,
experienced, honorable, and capable of nuance. He should
stand by his decisions, but be willing to put those
decisions through rigorous tests before they're made. It
would help if he could speak coherently, and explain clearly
and succinctly what we are facing, and how the government
proposes to deal with it -- less John Wayne and more Atticus
Finch.

We need a president who can cut through the partisan bile of
Washington and cable television news. Mr. Bush came into
office promising to heal the divisions of our country, yet
even after 9/11 he has morphed into the most polarizing
political figure in the country. Republicans are so fiercely
loyal to him it borders on worship that produces a dangerous
conformity. Democrats seethe with rage at the mere mention
of his name. We need a leader all Americans can be proud of,
and whom all Americans can respect. One whose legitimacy
everyone can accept.

Many of us have seen those qualities in you, sir. And so,
General Clarke, for your country, for those of us who still
believe in the ideas of Thomas Jefferson, Teddy Roosevelt,
Franklin Delano Roosevelt and John F. Kennedy... For the
idea that America is not a collection of political and
corporate interests, but a harvester of the potential of all
its people... For the notion that the president is not
Julius Caesar, but rather a servant of the Constitution...
For the hope that prosperity is not a reward for good
behavior, but the harvest of a great and compassionate
people, and that poverty is not a sin, but a changeable
condition... For the truth that freedom and ravaged civil
liberties cannot live together in the same book of laws...
For the principle that politics is not war. And for the
belief that the war on terrorism can be won without the loss
of our national character, our sacred honor, or our
collective soul... We hope that you will stand for the
Democratic Party nomination for the office of President of
the United States.

Respectfully,
Joy-Ann Reid,
columnist, Miami Herald
joyannreid@hotmail.com



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (4196)8/23/2003 4:31:31 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 10965
 
Message 19237430



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (4196)8/23/2003 4:48:32 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10965
 
MEMORANDUM FOR: Colleagues in Intelligence
____________________________________________

FROM: Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity

SUBJECT: Now It’s Your Turn

Sixty-four summers ago, when Hitler fabricated Polish provocations in his attempt to justify Germany’s invasion of Poland, there was not a peep out of senior German officials. Happily, in today’s Germany the imperative of truth telling no longer takes a back seat to ingrained docility and knee-jerk deference to the perceived dictates of “homeland security.” The most telling recent sign of this comes in today’s edition of Die Zeit, Germany’s highly respected weekly. The story, by Jochen Bittner holds lessons for us all.

Die Zeit’s report leaves in tatters the “evidence” cited by Secretary of State Colin Powell and other administration spokesmen as the strongest proof that Iraq was using mobile trailers as laboratories to produce material for biological weapons.

German Intelligence on Powell’s “Solid” Sources

Bittner notes that, like their American counterparts, German intelligence officials had to hold their noses as Powell on February 5 at the UN played fast and loose with intelligence he insisted came from “solid sources.” Powell’s specific claims concerning the mobile laboratories, it turns out, depended heavily—perhaps entirely—on a source of the Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND), Germany’s equivalent to the CIA. But the BND, it turns out, considered the source in no way “solid.” A “senior German security official” told Die Zeit that, in passing the report to US officials, the Germans made a point of noting “various problems with the source.” In more diplomatic language, Die Zeit’s informant indicated that the BND’s “evaluation of the source was not altogether positive.”

German officials remain in some confusion regarding the “four different sources” cited by Powell in presenting his case regarding the “biological laboratories.” Berlin has not been told who the other three sources are. In this context, a German intelligence officer mentioned that there is always the danger of false confirmation, suggesting it is possible that the various reports can be traced back to the same original source, theirs—that is, the one with which the Germans had “various problems.”

Even if there are in fact multiple sources, the Germans wonder what reason there is to believe that the others are more “solid” than their own. Powell indicated that some of the sources he cited were Iraqi émigrés. While the BND would not give Die Zeit an official comment, Bittner notes pointedly that German intelligence “proceeds on the assumption that émigrés do not always tell the truth and that the picture they draw can be colored by political motives.”

Plausible?

Despite all that, in an apparent bid to avoid taking the heat for appearing the constant naysayer on an issue of such neuralgic import in Washington, German intelligence officials say that, the dubious sourcing notwithstanding, they considered the information on the mobile biological laboratories “plausible.”

In recent weeks, any “plausibility” has all but evaporated. Many biological warfare specialists in the US and elsewhere were skeptical from the start. Now Defense Intelligence Agency specialists have joined their counterparts at the State Department and elsewhere in concluding that the two trailer/laboratories discovered in Iraq in early May are hydrogen-producing facilities for weather balloons to calibrate Iraqi artillery, as the Iraqis have said.

Perhaps it was this DIA report that emboldened the BND official to go public about the misgivings the BND had about the source.

Insult to Intelligence

What do intelligence analysts do when their professional ethic—to tell the truth without fear or favor—is prostituted for political expedience? Usually, they hold their peace, as we’ve already noted was the case in Germany in 1939 before the invasion of Poland. The good news is that some intelligence officials are now able to recognize a higher duty—particularly when the issue involves war and peace. Clearly, some BND officials are fed up with the abuse of intelligence they have witnessed—and especially the trifling with the intelligence that they have shared with the US from their own sources. At least one such official appears to have seen it as a patriotic duty to expose what appears to be a deliberate distortion.

This is a hopeful sign. There are indications that British intelligence officials, too, are beginning to see more distinctly their obligation to speak truth to power, especially in light of the treatment their government accorded Ministry of Defense biologist Dr. David Kelly, who became despondent to the point of suicide.

Even more commendable was the courageous move by senior Australian intelligence analyst Andrew Wilkie when it became clear to him that the government he was serving had decided to take part in launching an unprovoked war based on “intelligence” information he knew to be specious. Wilkie resigned and promptly spoke his piece—not only to his fellow citizens but, after the war, at Parliament in London and Congress in Washington. Andrew Wilkie was not naïve enough to believe he could stop the war when he resigned in early March. What was clear to him, however, was that he had a moral duty to expose the deliberate deception in which his government, in cooperation with the US and UK, had become engaged. And he knew instinctively that, in so doing, he could with much clearer conscience look at himself in the mirror each morning.

What About Us?

Do you not find it ironic that State Department foreign service officers, whom we intelligence professionals have (quite unfairly) tended to write off as highly articulate but unthinking apologists for whatever administration happens to be in power, are the only ones so far to resign on principle over the war on Iraq? Three of them have—all three with very moving explanations that their consciences would no longer allow them to promote “intelligence” and policies tinged with deceit.

What about you? It is clear that you have been battered, buffeted, besmirched. And you are painfully aware that you can expect no help at this point from Director George Tenet. Recall the painful morning when you watched him at the UN sitting squarely behind Powell, as if to say the Intelligence Community endorses the deceitful tapestry he wove. No need to remind you that his speech boasted not only the bogus biological trailers but also assertions of a “sinister nexus” between Iraq and al-Qaeda, despite the fact that your intense, year-and-a-half analytical effort had turned up no credible evidence to support that claim. To make matters worse, Tenet is himself under fire for acquiescing in a key National Intelligence Estimate on “weapons of mass destruction” in Iraq that included several paragraphs based on a known forgery. That is the same estimate from which the infamous 16 words were drawn for the president’s state-of-the-union address on January 28.

And not only that. In a dramatic departure from customary practice, Tenet has let the moneychangers into the temple—welcoming the most senior policymakers into the inner sanctum where all-source analysis is performed at CIA headquarters, wining and dining Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Colin Powell, National Security Assistant Condoleezza Rice, and even former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (now representing the Pentagon) on their various visits to make sure you didn’t miss anything! You have every right to expect to be protected from that kind of indignity. Small wonder that Gingrich, in a recent unguarded moment on TV, conceded that Tenet “is so grateful to President Bush that he will do anything for him.” CIA directors have no business being so integral a “part of the team.”

Powell, who points proudly to his four day-and-night cram course at the CIA in the days immediately prior to his February 5 UN speech, seems oblivious to the fact that personal visitations of that frequency and duration—and for that purpose—are unprecedented in the history of the CIA. Equally unprecedented are Cheney’s “multiple visits.” When George H. W. Bush was vice president, not once did he go out to CIA headquarters for a working visit. We brought our analysis to him. As you are well aware, once the subjects uppermost in policymakers’ minds are clear to analysts, the analysis itself must be conducted in an unfettered, sequestered way—and certainly without the direct involvement of officials with policy axes to grind. Until now, that is the way it has been done; the analysis and estimates were brought downtown to the policymakers—not the other way around.

What Happens When You Remain Silent?

There is no more telling example than Vietnam. CIA analysts were prohibited from reporting accurately on the non-incident in the Tonkin Gulf on August 4, 1964 until the White House had time to use the “furious fire-fight” to win the Tonkin Gulf resolution from Congress—and eleven more years of war for the rest of us.

And we kept quiet.

In November 1967 as the war gathered steam, CIA management gave President Lyndon Johnson a very important National Intelligence Estimate known to be fraudulent. Painstaking research by a CIA analyst, the late Sam Adams, had revealed that the Vietnamese Communists under arms numbered 500,000. But Gen. William Westmoreland in Saigon, eager to project an image of progress in the US “war of attrition,” had imposed a very low artificial ceiling on estimates of enemy strength.

Analysts were aghast when management caved in and signed an NIE enshrining Westmoreland’s count of between 188,000 and 208,000. The Tet offensive just two months later exploded that myth—at great human cost. And the war dragged on for seven more years.

Then, as now, morale among analysts plummeted. A senior CIA official made the mistake of jocularly asking Adams if he thought the Agency had “gone beyond the bounds of reasonable dishonesty.” Sam, who had not only a keen sense of integrity but first-hand experience of what our troops were experiencing in the jungles of Vietnam, had to be restrained. He would be equally outraged at the casualties being taken now by US forces fighting another unnecessary war, this time in the desert. Kipling’s verse applies equally well to jungle or desert:

If they question why we died, tell them because our fathers lied.

Adams himself became, in a very real sense, a casualty of Vietnam. He died of a heart attack at 55, with remorse he was unable to shake. You see, he decided to “go through channels,” pursuing redress by seeking help from imbedded CIA and the Defense Department Inspectors General. Thus, he allowed himself to be diddled for so many years that by the time he went public the war was mostly over—and the damage done.

Sam had lived painfully with the thought that, had he gone public when the CIA’s leaders caved in to the military in 1967, the entire left half of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial would not have had to be built. There would have been 25-30,000 fewer names for the granite to accommodate.

So too with Daniel Ellsberg, who made the courageous decision to give the Pentagon Papers on Vietnam to the New York Times and Washington Post for publication in 1971. Dan has been asked whether he has any regrets. Yes, one big one, he says. If he had made the papers available in 1964 or 65, this tragically unnecessary war might have been stopped in its tracks. Why did he not? Dan’s response is quite telling; he says the thought never occurred to him at the time.

Let the thought occur to you, now.

But Isn’t It Too Late?

No. While it is too late to prevent the misadventure in Iraq, the war is hardly over, and analogous “evidence” is being assembled against Iran, Syria, and North Korea. Yes, US forces will have their hands full for a long time in Iraq, but this hardly rules out further adventures based on “intelligence” as spurious as that used to argue the case for attacking Iraq.

The best deterrent is the truth. Telling the truth about the abuse of intelligence on Iraq could conceivably give pause to those about to do a reprise. It is, in any case, essential that the American people acquire a more accurate understanding of the use and abuse of intelligence. Only then can there be any hope that they can experience enough healing from the trauma of 9/11 to be able to make informed judgments regarding the policies pursued by this administration—thus far with the timid acquiescence of their elected representatives.

History is littered with the guilty consciences of those who chose to remain silent. It is time to speak out.

/s/

Gene Betit, Arlington, VA
Pat Lang, Alexandria, VA
David MacMichael, Linden, VA
Ray McGovern, Arlington, VA

Steering Group
Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity

Ray McGovern (rmcgovern@slschool.org), a CIA analyst from 1964 to 1990, regularly reported to the vice president and senior policy-makers on the President's Daily Brief from 1981 to 1985. He now is co-director of the Servant Leadership School, an inner-city outreach ministry in Washington.

commondreams.org