Thursday, December 22, 2011

Donald Trump: Obama Supported Al'Qaeda in Libya

Topher Morrison


The boisterous real estate mogul, star of The Apprentice and potential independent presidential candidate admits yesterday on the Michael Savage program what no presidential candidate thus far has had the audacity to proffer.  The Obama administration, through NATO, backed our "enemies" in Libya.

Background

          As early as March of 2011 stories began to pour out of Libya that insurgents fighting U.S. forces in Iraq, a majority of which were Libyan nationals, had been returning home to fight another enemy, dictator Mohammar Gaddafi under the aegis of NATO and ultimately president Barack Obama.  I mirrored the reports from historian Webster Griffen Tarpley here and ex CIA agent Michael Scheuer here.  

          By August there were more reports that an Al-Qaeda junta had been established as interim government.  Since that time it has been widely reported and officially admitted that NATO for months had been providing air support and intelligence to the Lybian Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) a terrorist organization according to the U.S. State Department.  This group has since been renamed Al'Qaeda in Libya and has been lead almost exclusively by Abdul Hakim Belhaj a cohort of the late Osama Bin Laden and de facto commander of Tripoli.  

          Having completed his mission thus far in Libya with the successful assassination of Ghaddafi and with the power brokers attempting to establish a government Belhaj and Co. are setting their sights on Syria, but Belhaj may again have some help there too as he is not the only element ready to aid the Free Syrian Army (FSA). 

          Meanwhile... stateside former government officials, experts, and think tanks have written an open letter to President Barack Obama called "Open Letter to 44" posted on the self styled hedonistic hegemon blog, Great Satan's Girlfriend.  The letter from neo-conservative luminaries such as Jamie Fly of the Foreign Policy Initiative (FPI) and William Kristol of the Weekly Standard and a Fox News contributor calls for Obama to establish links and support the Syrian National Council who runs the paramilitary group, FSA.  

          Concurrently there are similar hawks like Tom Ridge, former head of Homeland Security and democrat Gen. Wesley Clark attempting to de-list anther Iraqi based Iranian terrorist group MEK from the same U.S. State Department list for operations in Iran.  At this point it's no longer confusing why Obama stopped referring to the War on Terror, evidently he may need these sordid forces.

Donald Trump on the Michael Savage Program

          Since the beginning of the campaign season numerous interviews have been taken of prospective presidential candidates and as of yet none have criticized president Barack Obama for this blatant abuse of power and ignorance to facts on the ground in Libya.  The following is a transcript from Michael Savage's interview with Donald Trump, full interview and audio found here.  While he doesn't state explicitly that the administration backed Al'Qaeda, it's obvious who he was referring to:

TRUMP: "When we had Libya and Ghaddafi was absolutely routing about 7 or 8 months, see people forget, but he was routing the so called, you know the wonderful rebels as they call themselves..."

SAVAGE: "yes..."
TRUMP: "...like Gone With the Wind even though they come from Iran and also they were our enemies, but now you know... now they're our great friends, but they're not our friends.  

SAVAGE: [laughs]

TRUMP: "So, they came to us 7 months ago and they said 'we're being routed, we can't hold out more than another two days, will you help us?'  Obama said 'yes, here, through NATO', but [the U.S. is] NATO.  So Obama said yes.  Now, if he would of said 'yes, I will help you but we want 50% of your oil', they would have have said 'absolutely, a 100% you have a deal, sign right here on the dotted line.'  You would've had it signed in ten minutes, it would have been over and would have gone home." 

SAVAGE: "Unbelievable..."

TRUMP: "And we would have picked up 2 trillion worth of value, we didn't do that...we're stupid, we're stupid.  And now by the way if you went to 'em and said...and you know now they're all splitting up the oil, all the rebels having a lot of fun, you could probably have 20 ghaddafis eh by the way the worst one will emerge as the leader and the one who will hurt our country the worst or the most."
SAVAGE: Always, its always true the most viscious win.

TRUMP: Those are two examples Iraq keep the oil we didn't do it, its gone.  The other is Lybia... 

          While Donald Trump's analysis and forecast is honest and more importantly the first time any prominent celebrity has echoed the sinister reports coming out of the middle east he later reminded everyone that in wars long since passed invading armies upon victory got to keep what they conquered.  Keep the oil, he insists throughout the interview.  It isn't obvious whether Trump is criticizing Obama's recklessness or his ineptitude, but unfortunately it seems as though he doesn't mind running government like an empire or at least like a business.  Growth through acquisition.

Monday, December 19, 2011

Ron Paul: Capitalism's Cold Warrior


Topher Morrison

From talk radio luminaries Rush Limbaugh to Glenn Beck, from GOP candidates Mitt Romney to Rick Santorum, from think tanks the Foreign Policy Institute to the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and from sea to shinning sea "conservatives" agree Ron Paul's foreign policy is "nutty" even "misguided and extreme."  Really?  History, a shrewd understanding of geopolitics and advancements in technology tell us a different story.

"Ron Paul is one of the outstanding leaders fighting for a stronger national defense.  As a former Air Force officer, he knows well the needs of our armed forces, and he always puts them first. We need to keep him fighting for our country."
  
- Ronald Reagan 

The Cold Warrior

          If it wasn't already obvious looking back upon Ron Paul's (R-TX) strong pro-individual voting record, communism is anathema to his brand of Republican libertarianism.  Since Dr. Paul's first election, amidst the Cold War in 1976, he has been an avowed anti-communist.  Not only has he fought the domestic growth of collectivism, in the face of militant communism abroad he has stood steadfast against attempts to undermine American defense capabilities.  This may be a surprise to many in the GOP and the Tea Party, but the Air Force veteran was an anti-communist cold warrior.

          That's right!  While Ron Paul never championed the massive stockpiling of nuclear weapons (only to be dismantled later or sold all over the world) he vehemently opposed the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT II) under President Jimmy Carter.  In the October 1979 issue of his "Freedom Report" he refused to capitulate to the naivete in Congress:

Over the past twelve years — years of almost constant disarmament negotiations — the Soviet Union has outspent us on military offense and defense by 35% to 40%. This, the greatest military build-up in the history of the world, has led to rough equivalency between the USSR and the USA at best, and, at worst, clear inferiority for America.
           
          Tired of political compromises and understanding that the Soviet Union was taking advantage of our our good will and of those sympathetic and apologetic to its cause, Dr. Paul consistently opposed these types of arms reduction treaties.  In his view these treaties would have further emboldened the Soviet war-machine at the expense of US national security.

(Also read how Ron Paul fought both Republican and Democrat presidential administrations in their subsidization of communist China the Soviet Union via the Import-Export Bank.)

           Years later in 1983, Ron Paul additionally opposed the nuclear freeze initiative.  In that year's issue of his "Freedom Report" he captured the aggressive nature of the communist empire. “The American people want peace and freedom; the Soviets desire world conquest”!  He explained:

"The Soviet rulers are willing to sign treaties only when they advance their plans for conquest. The Soviets have violated SALT I and other treaties at least 27 times. The use of chemical weapons in Afghanistan is only the latest in the long series of treaty violations. I am unwilling to trust the security of the U.S. to the promises of the Soviet Union." [emphasis added]

          Ron Paul instead of reaching mere nuclear parity with the Soviet Union wanted, like president Ronald Reagan, to turn the tables on them and push the defense paradigm into new territory.  He believed the best offense was a strong defense, hence his support for the controversial Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), or "Star Wars." 

          Dr. Paul was condemned by those opposed to "militarizing space" fearing its "provocative" nature would encourage commensurate posturing by the Soviet Union.  Ron Paul understood as did General O. Graham progenitor of the "High Frontier space defense concept and former head of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA)" that the United States was already behind the Soviets in the militarization of space.  According to Gen. Graham the U.S. "better believe there will be weapons in space.  [Soviet missiles will] be flying right at us."

          Rep. Paul defended his position on SDI even as a libertarian during his first presidential bid in 1988.  Libertarians, strict advocates of non-interventionism, were concerned about the bellicosity of the "Star Wars" concept.  Ron Paul, however, understood the program to be the future of American defense and in fact, contrary to SDI critics, far less provocative and more sensible than the far flung constellation of U.S. commitments and awkward alliances it maintained around the globe:

I think that it’s worth doing research on SDI, but I would take the money out of the money we spend overseas. Seventy percent of our military money is spent overseas subsidizing rich allies [emphasis added] that should be spent on the defense of this country, such as SDI."

(You were once able to see this televised interview, but it has since been removed by Google and YouTube at the behest of ABC, CBS, and Viacom Int. "Sorry about that.")

          Ron Paul has undoubtedly beeen vindicated on this point as we have seen China now militarizing space.  To be unprepared to fight a space based war against this growing power would be unwise.  It looks as though, however, the U.S. Air Force might be siding with Paul's clairvoyance and longtime support for missile defense. 

 The Military Industrial Complex as a Foreign Entitlement Program

The nation which indulges toward another an habitual hatred or an habitual fondness is in some degree a slave. It is a slave to its animosity or to its affection, either of which is sufficient to lead it astray from its duty and its interest."
- George Washington 


          After the Cold War ended presidents George Bush Sr. and Bill Clinton never attempted to seriously reduce our military footprint abroad and allow Germany, Japan, Italy, South Korea and others to protect themselves even though they had been successful, peaceful and modern economies for decades.  

          There continue to be "mavericks" like Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and "conservatives" like Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) who've eschewed a recalibration of our force posture.  While they lament and bemoan welfare queens at home their stubborn dedication to an antiquated Cold War alignment has allowed a world wide defense entitlement program for the wealthiest of nations to persist, all at the expense of the American tax payer and our economy.   

          For instance, as of 2011 Japan, Germany, Italy and South Korea are #3, #4, #8, #15 top economies in the world respectively, why must the American tax payer subsidize the defense budgets of these advanced and successful economies?  (A list of U.S. military installations is fascinating to read; not to mention our "black sites.")  

          Mainstream GOP candidates rebuke Paul's desire to bring our troops home and sell our bases on the basis that "the world changed after 9/11" and that Ron Paul is somehow not in touch with modernity's demands.  This trite little maxim exposes the irony of so called foreign policy conservatives.

          The first charge of government is to protect its people, this is political science 101.  By subsidizing foreign governments in this most basic task, especially those whom compete directly with American business (of which the aforementioned economies most certainly do) we are essentially assuming that role for the world and therefore are subsidizing foreign taxpayers!  This subsidy allows them to forgo spending on their own defense and allocate funds to either their private sector in the form of tax cuts or to the public sector in the form of entitlement programs, what a deal!

          While our presence in foreign countries may in fact give our American firms first dibs in key markets and curry favor with this or that regime, is this how we want to do business?  Is this capitalism?  The answer is no and no.  In the end, our profligate military spending allows other nations to better compete against Americans for market share in the deliverance of goods and services, that much we can measure.

          The symptoms of these warfare queens directly parallel the symptoms of the welfare state at home in dependency, distortions in the marketplace, entrenched special interests, bureaucracies, mission creep and self fulfilling prophecies.  Just like a person dependent on welfare, a state (foreign and domestic) will become accustomed to defense subsidies, in other words, instead of dramatized and overblown personal tragedies searching for a bleeding heart warfare queens conjure and inflate threats to US national security in search for a policeman.  Judge Andrew Napolitano from FoxNews on how national security agencies might create their own boogy men:

  


The Future Defense Initiative - Return, Rebuild, Restrain

"...a passionate attachment of one nation for another produces a variety of evils. Sympathy for the favorite nation, facilitating the illusion of an imaginary common interest in cases where no real common interest exists, and infusing into one the enmities of the other, betrays the former into a participation in the quarrels and wars of the latter without adequate inducement or justification."

- George Washington

          We have spent nearly $700 billion on our military alone in FY 2010 and we have a $1.2 trillion "national security budget" for FY 2012, which by itself has accrued $185 billion dollars in interest payments; to whom they pay this to is another story entirely...  The point is we spend approximately as much on our own defense as does the rest of the planet, thus we can afford to take another look at how best to allocate our precious resources.

          Ron Paul for over 30 years has been consistent in his refusal to subsidize the defense of other nations at the expense of the American taxpayer.  By supporting national defense not national offense he can return not only our troops, but our dollars as well.  The paradigm which holds that the ends of our troops' bayonets is the beginning of the line separating the free world from the barbarian hordes is, I think you'll agree, archaic and ineffectual (I love a straw man don't you?).

          But seriously, force projection is the name of the game in the 21st century and people are frightened of losing it, especially when Ron Paul says he wants to bring our troops home and doesn't thoroughly explain what they'll do when they get here.  Moreover, they are also concerned about the massive industry built up around providing military technology.  Companies like Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grunman, etc. provide Americans with well paid high tech jobs and untold amounts of ancillary technologies.  Should you find yourself in this category, I'm here to tell you: we can and will project force and it will require a high tech military industrial complex.

          If you are an avid reader of Wired's "Danger Room Blog" as I am, you will understand that we have enough goodies piling up to make Santa blush: a $1 trillion jet with flaws almost as expensive, force fields a la Star Trek, robot dogs, a legion of high tech drones ranging in size from blimps to bugs, we have mini nukes, flying 'terminators', and 8 more weapons that will blow you away (including a hyper-sonic cruise missile capable of hitting any target on earth within an hour, recently successfully tested).  

          The dreams of the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) (now known as U.S. Missile Defense) pale in comparison to the technological juggernaut that is the U.S. military.  This is the bedrock upon which to build a new military for America's future and obviously the same reservoir of creativity to tap into for creating the tools to fit the new model.

          The United States currently boasts about 71 submarines (that we know of), which enable our military to conduct surveillance, gather intelligence, deploy covert special operations, precision strikes, battle group operations, and sea denial missions anywhere on the planet.  In sum, the submarines are a fleet of vigilant and mobile nuclear sentinels hidden in the world's ocean.  There is no doubt, at the end of the world there will be cocroaches and American submarines.  The point is this, the future of American force projection is expeditionary in nature predicated on speed and mobility.

Or U.S.S Ron Paul...
           
          The Joint Mobile Offshore Base (JMOB) or interim techniques called Seabasing are the most fascinating ideas since the revolutionary aircraft carrier.  If Dubai or the Japanese can build an entire island for restorts and airports this is surely not beyond our skill set.  A report provided to Congress in 2000 said this technology was "feasible", but the following year the Institute for Defense Analysis said the cost-benefit was not optimal considering alternatives.  As I have outlined there is more at stake than dollars. 

Ron Paul the Radical

          People like Jamie Fly of FPI may regard Ron Paul's "reckless isolationism" as a result of his incorrigable niavete, but as I have mentioned world wide socialism wasn't a goal of the Founders, it isn't a goal of the United States nor is it a goal of its people.  "Isolationism" is drive by rhetoric and as Cleon Skousen aptly surmized "separatism" is more appropriate language:

"This [is] far different from the modern term of 'isolationism.'  The... term implies a complete seclusion from other nations, as though the United States were to be detached and somehow incubated in isolation from other nations."

The idea Ron Paul would cut us off from the rest of the world like feudal Japan is preposterous.  In fact it is our business leaders and over 6,000 diplomats whom are the best ambassadors of American good will, cultural exchange and prosperity not the U.S. military.

          When it comes to Israel, Ron Paul has been unequivocal in his opposition to our cozy relationship and our foreign aid of this small socialist ethnocracy in the Middle East.  His "misguided and extreme" position is very unpopular in Washington and earned him a non-invitation to the recent Republican Jewish Coalition foreign policy debate.

          The idea that Ron Paul's restraint in entangling himself and our national interests with those of Israel is tantamount to being anti-Israel or anti-semetic is patently absurd.  In fact he even stood up for Israel and against Ronald Reagan whom condemned Israel's attack on Iraq's nuclear weapons facility in 1979!  Then again was Ronald Reagan a hawk or a dove?

 

           In the end shouldn't we be listening to what our troops have to say?  Ron Paul has received more donations than any other GOP candidate from active military personell.  They obviously see something in his foreign policy worth putting money on.  I leave you with this:





Monday, December 5, 2011

The Iran War Psychosis

Topher Morrison

Psychosis - a severe mental disorder in which thought and emotions are so impaired that contact is lost with external reality.

          The reality is western governments has been obsessed with Iran for decades, we know that, but why?  To be sure, Iran's obtuse theocracy just doesn't jive with our ideals of freedom and popular sovereignty.  To be controlled by a bearded unelected elite that professes to have its citizens secular, let alone spiritual interests truly at heart seems at face value, patently absurd.

          The idea, therefore, that bearded men whom claim to be the conduit through which God rules the Earth (or Land of the Aryans) can and will secure weapons of mass destruction makes us understandably - nervous.  However, before we move forward and obliterate Persia or turn the "Middle East into a Parking Lot" (ideas below) prudence demands we invoke a little historical perspective.

These fans of "creative destruction" claim bombs make friends, years later of course.

          At the beginning of the 20th century Iran was the home of the first Asian constitutional revolution, its future was bright.  Within the gardens of the British embassy 20,000 men engaged in a "vast open-air school of political science" and by December of 1906 forced the Shah of Iran, Mozzafar al-Din Shah Qajar to confirm, as his last act as supreme ruler and five days before his death, the monarchy's subordination to popular sovereignty. 

          It seemed an incredibly appropriate event, the nation of the Magna Carta offering itself as soil and safe haven for a democratic and constitutional revolution.  Relations would never again be as warm. The very next year the Anglo-Russian agreement divided the country into spheres of influence, a northern zone intended for Russia and a southern zone for Britain.  The United Kingdom at this point abandonded their support of the fledgling constitution and its parliament, the Majli and backed monarchical authority purportedly after rumors of an oil discovery.

          In 1908 entrepreneur William Knox D'Arcy and eventually Glasgow based Burmah Oil Company subsidiary Anglo-Persian Oil Company (APOC) discovered the oil they had been searching for for the better part of a decade.  In what was described as nothing less than the harshest environment on Earth, devoid of running water with temperatures soaring above 122 degrees and in a land "ruled by bandits and warlords" the British had found black gold. 

          The result of his discovery was captured in the poignant words of Elwell Sutton, it was the beginning of an "industry which would see Great Britain through two world wars and cause Persia more trouble than all the political maneuverings of the great powers put together."  To be sure, having already secured rights to Iranian oil from the Shah in 1901 for 60 years in exchange for 16% of the profits and a nominal down payment, Iran and Great Britain would be, for the medium term, married for better or worse.     

          By World War I substantial volume was being recovered from Iran and prepared through the world's largest oil refinery in Abadan, 33 miles from the Persian gulf.  The British government under the guidance of then First Lord of the Admiralty, Winston Churchill, in an effort to free Britain from U.S. Standard Oil and Royal Dutch Shell companies, injected massive capital into APOC.  In a wildly ironic foreshadowing it was Britian who first nationalized Iranian oil, well before the upheaval of 1951.  After 1913 the British government if not merely holding a controlling interest was for all intents and purposes, Anglo-Persian Oil Company.  

          Because of the industrial revolution's dependence on oil, access to Iran's titanic store of hydrocarbons has been regarded as essential to major military and commercial campaigns world wide.  Over 70 years ago, long before Iran posed "an existential threat to Israel" or to the US for that matter the Soviet Union and Great Britain forced neutral Iran into actively supporting the war effort.  The first militant adventure in Persia began with the Anglo-Soviet invasion of 1941 in order to secure supply lines and resources in WWII against the Axis Powers.  It was on the basis of this material support, albeit forced, which allowed Iran to enter the United Nations.

          As a result of invasion then Shah of Iran, Rezah Shah, appealed to U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt for help.  The shah was rebuffed, but assured that "the British and Soviet Governments [claim] that they have no designs on the independence or territorial integrity of Iran."  This proved to be untrue as the Soviets managed to inject massive communist political influence and carved out two vassal states for themselves in Azerbaijan and in the Kurdish Republic of Mahabad.  To understand how it might have effected the internal politics of Iran imagine if the U.S. lost an equivalent land area, say the state of Indiana, to a "Communist Canada."  You think our politics are vitriolic now!
     
            The Anglo-Soviet invasion wasn't the first punch in the stomach of sovereignty.  Because much of Iran's development was predicated on oil revenue the legitimate, albeit unequal, distribution agreed upon in 1901 and renegotiated in 1933 fomented national resentment.  In 1951 calls for nationalization of APOC assets reached a fevered pitch and resulted in the Majlis voting in favor of the action and subsequently electing the popular statesman and Times Man of the Year, Mohammed Mossadegh.

          By 1953 Britain had convinced the U.S. that Iran could very well become anther Soviet satellite under the leftist Mossadegh and with it Iranian resources which would undoubtedly be funneled into Soviet tanks and missiles.  Because the U.S. needed British support in the Korean War and on condition American companies could wet their beak in Iranian oil Allen Dulles and the CIA via Operation Ajax agreed to forcefully remove the democratically elected leader.  In 2000 the history of these actions were finally exposed, here.  It is in this document of 1954 that the term "blowback" was first used.  Undeniably the blowback manifested itself in the fundamentalist Iranian Revolution, which ushered in the anti west theocracy known as the Islamic Republic of Iran.  

          Iran's sea of oil has proven to be somewhat of a double edged sword for this ancient nation.  On one hand, energy independence has enabled it to continue to develop relatively on its own since nationalization and remain a regional player through OPEC and a modern military, however, on the other, it's this independence and preeminence that has resulted in its reluctance to wholeheartedly embrace the New World Order, an order focused on international governance and commensurate diminution of national sovereignty.  After what Iran has gone through national sovereignty is a premium and evidently regardless of political stripe.

          It is the West's prior misconduct and new supranational emphasis, which has undoubtedly lead Iran to see its Islamic neighbors, although often dissimilar in not only ethnicity, but in religious sectionalism, as brothers in arms against foreign aggression and as a de facto buffer zone.  The invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq can therefore be seen as a prelude to the current "crisis" - you could say Iran is now "stuck between a Iraq and a hard place."  I wonder if that informs their decision making process.  More to the point, might it inform us a little more about why there was no exit strategy in either Iraq or Afghanistan?

Source: TeamofMonkeys.com
          Iran's refusal to cede control and cooperation willingly has drawn the ire of internationalists who see world governance as a necessary and inevitable evolution.  Iran, including its energy reserves and its publicly owned central bank (opposed to control by the world wide network of private central banks), is one of the last pieces of the new world collage.   

          While this globalist dialectic of global governance seems inevitable.  While international cooperation is obviously desirable especially as we become more interconnected under advances in communication and the world seemingly smaller through advances in mobility those countries whom wish to reject a binding and bizarre unitary model find themselves politically speaking, out in the cold.

         Under this view it is not hard to realize Iranians fundamentally might not be as nutty as they seem, but in reality the sordid product of the insesant pressure to enter into the latest version of world order.  The Islamic Republic of Iran therefore is an amalgam of blowback and resistance to foreign intervention.

          While it may be easy and even compelling to allow our thoughts and emotions to be lost in the infinite minutia of downed drones, wild claims of holocaust denial, staged elections, stuxnet viruses, threats of evisceration, sabotage, human rights abuses, funding of "terrorism", and legions of maniacal mullahs wielding nuclear weapons; to allow these fears to impair our reason is to lose contact with the historically established and very real reality Iranians see foreign governments, including our own, in a similar light.  Hence, the Iran War Psychosis.

Updated 12/12/11