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To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (57983)10/1/2004 9:19:39 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Editorial: Experts on Iraq/A D.C. truth squad emerges

Published October 1, 2004

A quiet but important struggle is taking place in Washington, D.C., over the situation in Iraq: Professionals in the State Department, the intelligence community and the military are trying to get word to the American public that the United States is losing control of the situation. They are determinedly contradicting the fairy tales of progress coming from President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney on the campaign trail. These experts should be listened to; they have no ax to grind except that they abhor lies, distortions and the effect those have on the pursuit of effective policy.

Several weeks ago, a classified national intelligence estimate on Iraq, prepared in July by the National Intelligence Council (NIC), was leaked to the media. It painted a very gloomy picture of the situation, with the best the United States could hope for going forward was that Iraq would continue as it is now -- a country convulsed by violence, with little prospect for peace, economic and political stability or effective reconstruction. Things could, however, get markedly worse, and Iraq could slip into all-out civil war.

When asked about the report, Bush said the people who wrote it were just "guessing," a word he later amended to "estimating." Either way, he was dismissive of the report and continued unabashed to embellish his fairy-tale view.

Whereupon two earlier reports from the intelligence council suddenly were made available to the press. These were written months before the invasion of Iraq, and they predicted the chaos and insurgency that now grip that country. The message was clear: Don't buy the president's dismissal of the July NIC report. The NIC has a track record on Iraq, and it's a good one. Look at what it predicted before the invasion. Look at what Bush chose to ignore.

Indeed, most of the NIC record on Iraq is good. The one exception is the NIC's October 2002 national intelligence estimate that grossly exaggerated Iraq's weapons of mass destruction programs. It has been thoroughly discredited, and members of the NIC now complain that they were pressured to write it too quickly and that too little attention was paid to important qualifiers. Burned once, the NIC appears intent, thank heaven, on not being burned again.

In addition, high-ranking military, diplomatic and intelligence officials are talking with increasing frequency to reporters for the Washington Post, New York Times and other news organizations. A story last Wednesday in the Post began, "A growing number of career professionals within national security agencies believe that the situation in Iraq is much worse, and the path to success much more tenuous, than is being expressed in public by top Bush administration officials. ..."

The same day in the Times, a story on Iraq began, "Over the past 30 days, more than 2,300 attacks by insurgents have been directed against civilians and military targets in Iraq, in a pattern that sprawls over nearly every major population center outside the Kurdish north. ..."

Even Secretary of State Colin Powell has departed from the positive administration message. Yes, he said on a Sunday talk show, the insurgency is getting worse.

In a column on today's Commentary page, famed Vietnam War leaker Daniel Ellsberg asks where the Iraq leakers are. The answer is that they exist, and they are beginning an effort to bring some reality to the picture being painted of events in Iraq.

These are people whose careers have been entirely devoted to the service of this nation. They're not partisan; they're worried professionals who deserve to be heard and to be believed. They warn that the United States is headed for a destructive quagmire in Iraq. Implicitly, they also warn Americans not to believe the Mother Goose tales being peddled by Bush and Cheney. That's especially good and timely advice.

© Copyright 2004 Star Tribune. All rights reserved.



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (57983)10/1/2004 9:33:41 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Boom times for War Inc.
_______________________

The only sector of the economy that sees a rosy future is the bullets-and-body-bags industry.

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By James K. Galbraith
Salon.com
Sept. 30, 2004

On Sept. 21, 2001, the American Stock Exchange created the Amex Defense Index, a measure of the stock prices of 15 corporations that together account for about 80 percent of procurement and research contracting by the Department of Defense. The index, of course, includes the five largest military contractors: Boeing, General Dynamics, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and Raytheon.

The chart above, presented at a conference in Paris by economists Luc Mampaey and Claude Serfati, shows what has happened since then. With the Afghan war the arms index surged, gaining over 25 percent by April 2002. Then it slumped, along with the rest of the market. If you had invested $1,000 in a defense portfolio at the peak of the Taliban boomlet, by March 2003 you would have lost a third of your stake.

But then came Iraq. And it's been clover for contractors ever since. Total gains since March 2003 are above 80 percent. Even if you'd put your money in at the beginning, in September 2001, you'd be up over 50 percent. That isn't bad, considering.

This is no scandal, of course. War is naturally good for the arms business. The companies involved are public -- anyone can buy their stocks. Suppose that back in 2001 you'd had unlimited access to bank credit. And suppose you'd also had the certain knowledge that George W. Bush would take out Saddam Hussein, come what may. Well then you, too, could have made billions over the past three years.

And if you were the Carlyle Group, to which ex-President George H.W. Bush then served as a senior advisor? In that case, you did very well indeed. The Carlyle Group today describes itself as "the leading private equity investor in the aerospace and defense industries." There is no reason to doubt that claim.

The really big scandal lies elsewhere. It isn't in the fact that a small group of political insiders made big money from the Iraq war. The big scandal is in all those other numbers: the Dow Jones industrial average. The Standard and Poor's 500. The NASDAQ composite index. Look at them -- they haven't budged in three years.

Some people get concerned when the stock market goes up. They fret over bubbles, which must pop, and over the inequality of wealth that naturally rises with a rising market, given that only a few Americans own most of the corporate stock. These are real problems. But count me in the group that tends to see the bright side. A rising stock market means that businesses see the possibility of future profit, which spurs them to invest. And that, above all, is what creates the new jobs so lacking in the past four years.

If you want a one-picture analysis of the American economic problem, this chart is as good as any you will find. It exposes with brutal clarity the Bush economy as it really is -- run for the profit of the president's friends. The chart exposes with equal clarity the largest economic cost of the Iraq war: the blockade it has laid across and against the full recovery of everyone else.

salon.com

Much has been made of the fact that Bush's tax cuts went overwhelmingly to the top 1 percent of the income distribution. But if those tax cuts had succeeded in setting off a strong and widespread economic expansion -- as Ronald Reagan's did, 20 years ago -- who would object? Not me, frankly. The problem is that they failed to do this.

Part of the reason lies in the poor design of the tax cuts. And part of the reason, surely, lies in the fact that the Iraq war is a huge question mark overshadowing the future of the American economy, and hence a deterrent to business investment.

Business isn't stupid. It knows that Iraq took us away from the "war on terror." It knows we're less safe now than if we'd pursued al-Qaida to the bitter end. It knows that energy markets are unsettled and that we may be heading toward a long period of expensive oil. It knows, perhaps above all, that the war in Iraq is far from over. And it knows that certain Washington insiders are even now busily preparing for a post-election Bush administration showdown with Iran. None of this has inspired confidence.

Back in 1919, in the wake of the Great War, John Maynard Keynes wrote of the effects of war on business: "The war has disclosed the possibility of consumption to all and the vanity of abstinence to many." Something like this happened after September 2001. Households borrowed and kept up their spending even as incomes shrank. But businesses, forward-looking and unsettled by the prospects ahead, curtailed investment. As Keynes also wrote, "no longer confident of the future, [capitalists] seek to enjoy more fully their liberties of consumption so long as they last." But they don't invest, and they don't create jobs.

The big scandal isn't who made money. It's who didn't. It isn't the handful who got good jobs working for defense firms. (It isn't the brave truck drivers risking their lives on the roads of Iraq.) It's the millions who got nothing at all. It's the fact that Bush did nothing about that. The message, once again: Bush doesn't care.

The lines between the two great issues of this campaign -- the jobless economy and the Iraq war -- are blurred. The economy is part of the price we're paying for the war. And on both, the Bush message is the same: Things are fine. The economy is strong and getting stronger. Baghdad is safe and getting safer. And the infidel is being thrown into the sea.

Oh, excuse me. The last one isn't Bush. It's from Baghdad Bob -- Comical Ali -- Saddam Hussein's minister of information, as Bill Maher brilliantly reminded us the other day.

- - - - - - - - - - - -

About the writer:
James K. Galbraith is Salon's economics correspondent. He teaches at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin.

salon.com