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Richard
Clarke: 'Bush planned the Iraq war before 9/11.
Comment by Larry Ross - June15, 2004
This authoritative article by Bush insider Richard Clarke reveals a lot
of truths that Bush and Co would prefer to be hidden from the US public.
For example: Clarke said Bush came into office with a hidden plan to make
war on Iraq. He never revealed that to the US public beforehand. Clarke
said the smoke was still coming out of the 9/11 attack when one would
think Bush would focus on bin-Laden and al-Qaeda. That's what people thought.
According to Clarke, Bush was plotting the new Iraq war as a top priority.
Because of the many doubts and questions about the 9/11 attack, people
are now wondering if the 9/11 attack was part of the plot. Bush and cabal
could not have initiated the phoney Iraq war and got those billions of
US dollars allocated, unless they had a 9/11 attack. So whether it was
planned, or was allowed to happen, or just happened out-of-the blue, the
Bush administration was very quick to exploit it. As the neo-cons said
in one of their pre-war planning documents. We need a new Pearl Harbour.
One way or another, they got it.
There's lots in Clarke's article that provides more proofs for our War
Crimes Indictment. I think it's important for people to realise that Bush's
and his neo-com cabal plotted to begin their war crimes agenda and plotted
how to set up the whole state apparatus that would allow them to get away
with it, some time before Bush became President in 2000. I think what
we are seeing is a very well thought out and orchestrated plan to make
the US engage in a number of wars, of which Afghanistan and Iraq were
the first two. As well as violating a number of international laws and
agreements, Bush and cabal have deeply violated the US Constution and
Bush should be impeached.
What do criminals do when their deceits and
murderous illegal acts are exposed?. I dont think they will capitulate
or admit any crimes.
They are apt to increase their crimes to new extremes,
as a way of justifying themselves and carry on with their war plans. They
could cause so much more war and violence, including the use of nuclear
weapons, and more severe terrorist attacks as warned. Doing it that way,
and with continuing mass media support for Bush crimes, the US public
would be even more frightened, confused and ready to support whatever
is asked of them, as they did after 9/11.
So I think our War Crimes indictment is important in helping the peace
people who are working to stop this unfolding crime.
The indictment helps get across sustanial proofs to back up a simple message:
DON'T VOTE FOR A WAR CRIMINAL
Larry Ross, Secretary,
NZ Nuclear-Free Peacemaking
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Richard Clarke:
'Iraq could be much more of a problem for America
than if Saddam had stayed in power'
The Monday Interview: Former
White House security chief
By Andrew Buncombe, The Independent,
in Washington, June 14, 2004
Richard Clarke is the man who put the cat
among the pigeons. This year, in the same week as the former counter-terrorism
chief was giving evidence to an independent commission investigating the
attacks of 11 September, Mr Clarke's scathing account of the failure to
deal with al-Qa'ida was published.
In his tell-all memoir, Against all Enemies,
and in his public testimony, Mr Clarke could barely have been more provocative.
Much of the blame for failing to stop the attacks of 11 September, he
said, could be laid at the feet of the Bush administration. They ignored
his warnings about the threat posed by Osama bin Laden and - after al-Qa'ida
had wreaked havoc and death in New York and Washington - President George
Bush was distracted from taking on the terror network by his groundless
wish to invade Iraq.
"Your government failed you," Mr
Clarke told the hearing, turning to the relatives of those who died and
who had come to Washington to hear his testimony. "Those entrusted
with protecting you failed you. And I failed you. We tried hard, but that
doesn't matter, because we failed."
Not surprisingly, the administration hit
back immediately. Mr Clarke was wrong, said officials. He was out of the
loop, said Vice-President Dick Cheney. The White House now considered
Mr Clarke an outcast.
He is a blunt, plain-spoken man, accused
by some former colleagues of arrogance and even rudeness. But does he
regret speaking out. "No, not at all," he said. "I always
thought, particularly in a White House job if you placed a high value
on being liked by the bureaucracy, if that was one of your primary goals,
then you probably should not be in that job.
"The job of a White House NSC [National
Security Council] staff person is to be an enforcer of presidential policy.
The bureaucracy does not naturally do what the President tells it to do."
But Mr Clarke's complaint is that the President
and his senior staff, in the spring and summer of 2001, failed to listen
to what he advised them about the dangers posed by al-Qa'ida "when
maybe we could have done something to stop 9/11". The day after the
attacks, Mr Bush was already focusing on Iraq. "Look into Iraq, Saddam,"
Mr Clarke says he was told angrily as his officials briefed him on al-Qa'ida
being almost certainly responsible for the attacks.
Mr Clarke, who now has a consultancy firm
in Arlington, Virginia, remains uncertain whether al-Qa'ida could have
been stopped. "I don't think we know. It's very facile to say it
could have been or could not have been. There is absolutely no way of
knowing. What I do believe is that had we known about the two al-Qa'ida
individuals who were among the hijackers ... Had we known they were in
the country, which the FBI at some level knew and which the CIA at some
level knew, had my counterparts at the FBI and CIA known, had I known,
then I firmly believe we could have caught those two.
"Now, you can draw all sorts of conclusions
from that. One, is that, simply, there would have been 17 hijackers. Another
conclusion is that we might have been able to pull strings on those two
and find more of the 19. But even if we had rounded up all 19 there would
have been another 19. There would have been another major attack. The
point is that al-Qa'ida was on a march to have a major terrorist attack
... They would not stop until they succeeded in having one. So yes, we
might have been able to stop a particular attack."
Apart from the missed opportunities he highlights,
what might be of potentially greater concern is Mr Clarke's belief that
al-Qa'ida could easily attack again, and America and Britain remain exceedingly
vulnerable. Another attack is not inevitable ("I think almost nothing
is inevitable," he said) but possible.
He added: "I think it is harder but
I can think of ways of them doing it and I'm sure they can imagine ways
of doing it. It's entirely possible there will be another major attack."
A dirty bomb, he believes, is probably in the "too hard" category.
It is more likely terrorists would use suicide-bombs to attack softer
targets, such as casinos or shopping malls. "Those are the two scenarios
I use all the time when discussing it," he said. "If you do
eight guys in eight shopping malls you have an enormous effect on the
economy ... so much of the US economy is tied up with retail sales.
"If you did four casinos with four guys
you could destroy the economy of Las Vegas. There are lots of low-end
ways of doing things. And the reason they have not done some of the low-end
threats, I think, is because they set the barrier for themselves very
high with the 9-11 attacks. They may want another major attack; they may
feel that if they do less than a major attack [they] will look like a
lesser force."
Richard Clarke has made a career out of telling
uncomfortable truths. He was born in Boston, his mother a nurse and his
father a worker in a chocolate factory. In 1961, aged 12, he won a chance
to attend the prestigious Boston Latin School, whose famous former pupils
include Benjamin Franklin and Samuel Adams. From there, Mr Clarke - an
active opponent of the Vietnam War - went to the University of Pennsylvania
to study for a career in national security. "I wanted to get involved
in national security in 1973 as a career to make sure that Vietnam did
not happen again." He spent five years in the Pentagon and then moved
to the State Department. In 1992, he was taken on by the White House as
a national security staffer. One of the first things he did there was
to exert greater influence on the Counter-terrorism Security Group. Though
his career stretched over four presidencies - Ronald Reagan, George Bush
Sr, Bill Clinton and George Bush Jr - it is the last for whom he reserves
his most outspoken criticism. The American people were duped, he believes,
by Mr Bush who came to office with a plan to invade Iraq but hid it during
the election campaign. "It was very clear on 9/11, on the days immediately
following when we had been attacked, that attention turned to Iraq, even
as the smoke was still coming out of the World Trade Centre."
Mr Clarke believes Mr Bush's decision to
invade Iraq undoubtedly damaged the hunt for al-Qa'ida. He also believes
it has diverted much-needed resources from Homeland Security, leaving
the country unnecessarily vulnerable. "[Iraq] is a fiasco,"
he said. "We can only hope there is a way of minimising the losses
and getting out in a way that allows us to leave behind some sort of stable
government. If [it stays as it is] now there is a high risk that what
we leave behind will be worse than what was there before ... Iraq could
easily be much more of a problem for us than it would have been if Saddam
Hussein had stayed in power."
The whistleblower highlights three ways in
which the invasion of Iraq diverted resources from the real "war
on terror". Money is not available for the Department of Homeland
Security to protect potential targets such as trains and chemical plants
adequately, funds are not available to help countries such as Pakistan
and Yemen, which could do more to counter terrorism.
Finally, the war was a great propaganda coup
for the jihadist movement. "It probably greatly increased its recruitment,"
he said. "There was a period of time as well ... where resources
in the hunt for Bin Laden were pulled away, satellite resources, special
forces, Predator [drones] were sent to Iraq, rather than sent to Afghanistan.
That has been somewhat rectified but not entirely. If Bin Laden had written
the scenario it would have been identical to what happened."
One of Mr Clarke's friends from the national
security council, is foreign policy adviser to the Democrat presidential
nominee John Kerry. Mr Clarke has refused to endorse Mr Kerry in his bid
for the presidency. "I do not want to be seen simply as a politically
partisan commentator," he said. "I was a career civil servant.
We don't have as much a tradition of career civil servants as you do [in
Britain] but we have senior executive service and I was a member of that
for a long time. I have a lot of Republican friends and they agree with
me on most of what I say.
"So I don't want to lose the support
of large numbers of Americans by my choosing sides, by choosing parties.
I think this issue should be non-partisan. A large number of Republicans
agree with me and I want them to speak out."
THE CV
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Age: 53
Education: Boston Latin School and University of Pennsylvania
Career: 1985-88: Deputy assistant secretary of state for intelligence
1985-92: State Department
1989-92: Assistant secretary for politico-military affairs
1998-2000: National co-ordinator for security, infrastructure protection,
and counter-terrorism
1992-03: Chair of the counter-terrorism group, National Security Council
March 2004: Testified to national commission on terrorist attacks
Author of 'Against All Enemies: Inside America's War on Terror - What
Really Happened'
© 2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd
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