One 77-year-old’s search for the truth: 9/11, election fraud, illegal wars, Wall Street criminality, a stolen nuke, the neocon wars, control of the U.S. government by global corporations, the unjustified assault on Social Security, media complicity, and the "Great Recession" about to become the second Great Depression. "The most important truths are hidden from us by the powerful few who strive to steal the American dream by keeping We the People in the dark."

Showing posts with label US foreign policy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US foreign policy. Show all posts
Friday, January 29, 2016
From Paul Craig Roberts' opening paragraph below: "In the last years of the 20th century fraud entered US foreign policy in a new way. On false pretenses Washington dismantled Yugoslavia and Serbia in order to advance an undeclared agenda. In the 21st century this fraud multiplied many times. Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, and Libya were destroyed, and Iran and Syria would also have been destroyed if the President of Russia had not prevented it." ... "Washington’s war crimes rival those of any country in history."
The 21st Century: An Era Of Fraud — Paul Craig Roberts
January 18, 2016 | Original Here Go here to sign up to receive email notice of this news letter
The 21st Century: An Era Of Fraud
Paul Craig Roberts
In the last years of the 20th century fraud entered US foreign policy in a new way. On false pretenses Washington dismantled Yugoslavia and Serbia in order to advance an undeclared agenda. In the 21st century this fraud multiplied many times. Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, and Libya were destroyed, and Iran and Syria would also have been destroyed if the President of Russia had not prevented it. Washington is also behind the current destruction of Yemen, and Washington has enabled and financed the Israeli destruction of Palestine. Additionally, Washington operated militarily within Pakistan without declaring war, murdering many women, children, and village elders under the guise of “combating terrorism.” Washington’s war crimes rival those of any country in history.
I have documented these crimes in my columns and books (Clarity Press).
Anyone who still believes in the purity of Washington’s foreign policy is a lost soul.
Russia and China now have a strategic alliance that is too strong for Washington. Russia and China will prevent Washington from further encroachments on their security and national interests. Those countries important to Russia and China will be protected by the alliance. As the world wakes up and sees the evil that the West represents, more countries will seek the protection of Russia and China.
America is also failing on the economic front. My columns and my book, The Failure of Laissez Faire Capitalism, which has been published in English, Chinese, Korean, Czech, and German, have shown how Washington has stood aside, indeed cheering it on, while the short-term profit interests of management, shareholders, and Wall Street eviscerated the American economy, sending manufacturing jobs, business know-how, and technology, along with professional tradeable skill jobs, to China, India, and other countries, leaving America with such a hollowed out economy that the median family income has been falling for years. Today 50% of 25 year-old Americans are living with their parents or grandparents because they cannot find employment sufficient to sustain an independent existance. http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-10-27/why-are-half-all-25-year-olds-still-living-their-parents-federal-reserve-answers This brutal fact is covered up by the presstitute US media, a source of fantasy stories of America’s economic recovery.
The facts of our existence are so different from what is reported that I am astonished. As a former professor of economics, Wall Street Journal editor and Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy, I am astonished at the corruption that rules in the financial sector, the Treasury, the financial regulatory agencies, and the Federal Reserve. In my day, there would have been indictments and prison sentences of bankers and high government officials.
In America today there are no free financial markets. All the markets are rigged by the Federal Reserve and the Treasury. The regulatory agencies, controlled by those the agencies are supposed to regulate, turn a blind eye, and even if they did not, they are helpless to enforce any law, because private interests are more powerful than the law.
Even the government’s statistical agencies have been corrupted. Inflation measures have been concocted in order to understate inflation. This lie not only saves Washington from paying Social Security cost-of-living adjustments and frees the money for more wars, but also by understating inflation, the government can create real GDP growth by counting inflation as real growth, just as the government creates 5% unemployment by not counting any discouraged workers who have looked for jobs until they can no longer afford the cost of looking and give up. The official unemployment rate is 5%, but no one can find a job. How can the unemployment rate be 5% when half of 25-year olds are living with relatives because they cannot afford an independent existence? As John Williams (shadowfacts) reports, the unemployment rate that includes those Americans who have given up looking for a job because there are no jobs to be found is 23%.
The Federal Reserve, a tool of a small handful of banks, has succeeded in creating the illusion of an economic recovery since June, 2009, by printing trillions of dollars that found their way not into the economy but into the prices of financial assets. Artificially booming stock and bond markets are the presstitute financial media’s “proof” of a booming economy.
The handful of learned people that America has left, and it is only a small handful, understand that there has been no recovery from the previous recession and that a new downturn is upon us. John Williams has pointed out that US industrial production, when properly adjusted for inflation, has never recovered its 2008 level, much less its 2000 peak, and has again turned down.
The American consumer is exhausted, overwhelmed by debt and lack of income growth. The entire economic policy of America is focused on saving a handful of NY banks, not on saving the American economy.
Economists and other Wall Street shills will dismiss the decline in industrial production as America is now a service economy. Economists pretend that these are high-tech services of the New Economy, but in fact waitresses, bartenders, part time retail clerks, and ambulatory health care services have replaced manufacturing and engineering jobs at a fraction of the pay, thus collapsing effective aggregate demand in the US. On occasions when neoliberal economists recognize problems, they blame them on China.
It is unclear that the US economy can be revived. To revive the US economy would require the re-regulation of the financial system and the recall of the jobs and US GDP that offshoring gave to foreign countries. It would require, as Michael Hudson demonstrates in his new book, Killing the Host, a revolution in tax policy that would prevent the financial sector from extracting economic surplus and capitalizing it in debt obligations paying interest to the financial sector.
The US government, controlled as it is by corrupt economic interests, would never permit policies that impinged on executive bonuses and Wall Street profits. Today US capitalism makes its money by selling out the American economy and the people dependent upon it.
In “freedom and democracy” America, the government and the economy serve interests totally removed from the interests of the American people. The sellout of the American people is protected by a huge canopy of propaganda provided by free market economists and financial presstitutes paid to lie for their living.
When America fails, so will Washington’s vassal states in Europe, Canada, Australia, and Japan. Unless Washington destroys the world in nuclear war, the world will be remade, and the corrupt and dissolute West will be an insignificant part of the new world.
Wednesday, May 06, 2015
If enough NATO nations decide to reject Washington's push for a war with Russia, there may be no war!
The Choice Before Europe — Paul Craig Roberts
May 5, 2015 | Original Here Go here to sign up to receive email notice of this news letter
The Choice Before Europe
Paul Craig Roberts
Washington continues to drive Europe toward one or the other of the two most likely outcomes of the orchestrated conflict with Russia. Either Europe or some European Union member government will break from Washington over the issue of Russian sanctions, thereby forcing the EU off of the path of conflict with Russia, or Europe will be pushed into military conflict with Russia.
In June the Russian sanctions expire unless each member government of the EU votes to continue the sanctions. Several governments have spoken against a continuation. For example, the governments of the Czech Republic and Greece have expressed dissatisfaction with the sanctions.
US Secretary of State John Kerry acknowledged growing opposition to the sanctions among some European governments. Employing the three tools of US foreign policy–threats, bribery, and coercion–he warned Europe to renew the sanctions or there would be retribution. We will see in June if Washington’s threat has quelled the rebellion.
Europe has to consider the strength of Washington’s threat of retribution against the cost of a continuing and worsening conflict with Russia. This conflict is not in Europe’s economic or political interest, and the conflict has the risk of breaking out into war that would destroy Europe.
Since the end of World War II Europeans have been accustomed to following Washington’s lead. For awhile France went her own way, and there were some political parties in Germany and Italy that considered Washington to be as much of a threat to European independence as the Soviet Union. Over time, using money and false flag operations, such as Operation Gladio, Washington marginalized politicians and political parties that did not follow Washington’s lead.
The specter of a military conflict with Russia that Washington is creating could erode Washington’s hold over Europe. By hyping a “Russian threat,” Washington is hoping to keep Europe under Washington’s protective wing. However, the “threat” is being over-hyped to the point that some Europeans have understood that Europe is being driven down a path toward war.
Belligerent talk from the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, from John McCain, from the neoconservatives, and from NATO commander Philip Breedlove is unnerving Europeans. In a recent love-fest between Breedlove and the Senate Armed Services Committee, chaired by John McCain, Breedlove supported arming the Ukrainian military, the backbone of which appears to be the Nazi militias, with heavy US weapons in order to change “the decision calculus on the ground” and bring an end to the break-away republics that oppose Washington’s puppet government in Kiev.
Breedlove told the Senate committee that his forces were insufficient to withstand Russian aggression and that he needed more forces on Russia’s borders in order to “reassure allies.”
Europeans have to decide whether the threat is Russia or Washington. The European press, which Udo Ulfkotte reports in his book, Bought Journalists, consists of CIA assets, has been working hard to convince Europeans that there is a “revanchist Russia” on the prowl that seeks to recover the Soviet Empire. Washington’s coup in Ukraine has disappeared. In its place Washington has substituted a “Russian invasion,” hyped as Putin’s first step in restoring the Soviet empire.
Just as there is no evidence of the Russian military in Ukraine, there is no evidence of Russian forces threatening Europe or any discussion or advocacy of restoring the Soviet empire among Russian political and military leaders.
In contrast Washington has the Wolfowitz Doctrine, which is explicitly directed at Russia, and now the Council on Foreign Relations has added China as a target of the Wolfowitz doctrine. http://carnegieendowment.org/files/Tellis_Blackwill.pdf
The CFR report says that China is a rising power and thereby a threat to US world hegemony. China’s rise must be contained so that Washington can remain the boss in the Asian Pacific. What it comes down to is this: China is a threat because China will not prevent its own rise. This makes China a threat to “the International Order.” “The International Order,” of course, is the order determined by Washington. In other words, just as there must be no Russian sphere of influence, there must be no Chinese sphere of influence. The CFR report calls this keeping the world “free of hegemonic control” except by the US.
Just as General Breedlove demands more military spending in order to counter “the Russian threat,” the CFR wants more military spending in order to counter “the Chinese threat.” The report concludes: “Congress should remove sequestration caps and substantially increase the U.S. defense budget.”
Clearly, Washington has no intention of moderating its position as the sole imperial power. In defense of this power, Washington will take the world to nuclear war. Europe can prevent this war by asserting its independence and departing the empire.
Saturday, September 27, 2014
Nomi Prins: "The real battle between the US and Russia is over the gateway countries in political flux. The real winners will be the private banks and oil companies that will reap the strategic benefits from gateway control over related markets and resources, supported by military and political might, and augmented with speculative capital for years to come. American and global citizens, oblivious to all this, will be the losers in this global shell game."
Gateway Policies: ISIS, Obama and US Financial Boots-on-the-Ground
Sunday, September 21, 2014 at 9:28PM Original here
President Obama’s neo-Cold War is not about ideology or respect for borders. It is about money and global power. The current battle over control of gateway nations - strategic locations in which private firms can establish the equivalent of financial boots-on-the-ground - is being waged in the Middle East and Ukraine under the auspices of freedom and western capitalism (er, “democracy”). In these global gateways, private banks can infiltrate resource-rich locales fortified by political will, public aid and military support to garner lucrative market advantages. ISIS poses a threat to global gateway control that transcends any human casualties. That’s why Congress decided to authorize funds to fight ISIS despite the risk.
The common thread of today’s global gateway nations appears to be oil. But even more valuable are the multitude of financing deals that would accompany building new pipelines, arming allies, and reconstructing civil-war-torn countries. Indeed, hundreds of billions of dollars are at stake in America’s wars of “principle.”
Middle-East Gateways: ISIS and Money
Obama’s recent public address on fighting ISIS had a dash of economy sprinkled in. For him, US economic policy is foreign policy. It is also a product of an American political-financial expansionary land-and-resource grab that has been going on for decades. Obama’s execution may be far less authoritative than President Eisenhower’s. But his neo-financial Cold War has similar elements to those initiated by Eisenhower and the American banking elite in the 1950s when they collaborated to project American power into more countries, using the military and a combination of public and private capital, as tools.
The second World Bank President and 1950s Chairman of Chase Bank, John McCloy, and ascending and later Chase Chairman David Rockefeller both had aspirations to financially penetrate the Middle East. So did other major bankers. The US government and its banks first focused on Beirut as a gateway to the Middle East. Eisenhower dispatched military personnel to Beirut in 1958 not because he cared about the Lebanese, but because of the attractiveness of the country’s potential as a gateway to the region. By the 1970s, oil and money relationships between Chase and Saudi Arabia and Egypt grew, as they did with Iran and the Shah. Rockefeller's relationship with the Shah, who kept his family money with Chase, ignited the Iranian hostage crisis in 1979. Before that, the US government and its military contractors made billions of dollars from arms deals with Iran.
Citigroup opened its first Iraq branch in September 2013, ten years after George W. Bush began his Iraq War while facing a recessed American economy. A decade ago, the Bush administration selected JPM Chase to manage billions of dollars of financing for Iraq imports and exports. JPM Chase also opened a branch in Iraq last year to compete with Citigroup for current gains. Billions of dollars in new pipeline funding and other projects are now up for grabs in Iraq. If the US supports the Iraqi government (against ISIS), these banks, as well as oil and infrastructure-building companies are poised to get more of a chunk of that money. Citigroup is already a forerunner for arranging a $2 billion loan for Boeing Jets to Iraq. As Iraq's Deputy Transport Minister Bangen Rekani said in April, “We need a lot of funds...we’re in a race to complete the maximum number of projects in a short time.”
Regarding Syria, Obama’s plea for showing strength worked. Congress voted in rare bipartisan fashion to fund the moderate Syrian rebels or “free Syrian army rebels.” According to Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, initial assistance would be “small arms, vehicles and basic equipment like communications, as well as tactical and strategic training.” That could just be the beginning. He also said, “as these forces prove their effectiveness on the battlefield, we would be prepared to provide increasingly sophisticated types of assistance." We’ve been down this road before, positioning the military to gain financial access to an area relative to our competition. It’s lasted for years and killed thousands of people, while not accomplishing the stated goal of curtailing terrorist threats or activities.
It gets complicated from there. Moderate Syrian rebels have been fighting against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, whom the US would support against ISIS. The US thinks these forces would cease fighting against al-Assad to fight ISIS instead, though the US claims it is not directly cooperating with al-Assad.
Despite this, the US financial hope is that once the dust clears from all these regime changes we support militarily, there will be demand for massive reconstruction and resource extraction projects that our private banks can take care of alongside the IMF and World Bank. At a press conference in Beirut in June, World Bank President Jim Yong Kim told the international community that the World Bank would help to rebuild Syria (at a cost of $150 billion after an “internationally recognized government” was put in place) as well as Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey and Iraq during their 'recovery' from years of war. Mega reconstruction profits are at stake for private firms in symbiotic partnerships with these international entities. So too, are the requirements for austerity and loosely regulated financial markets as the Western “reform” bargains that accompany them.
“Wars on terror” serve as a distraction in public and media discourse from a bipolar economy. The September releases of the US Census Report and the Federal Reserve Consumer Finance Survey revealed an ongoing trend toward greater income and wealth inequality. We remain 8 million jobs below pre-crisis levels, adjusted for population growth. Real wages have stagnated or declined. Employers have no incentive to provide well-paying jobs amidst ample desperation in the ranks of the unemployed. We are a mess at home.
Rather than deal with this, the US is trying to prevent terrorism from blocking private bank and corporate expansions and profit elsewhere. ISIS has already caused Iraq to delay its first mega project-finance deal. The $18 billion Basra-Aqaba oil pipeline would extend through Jordan to the Red Sea, pumping a million barrels of crude oil per day, as well as 258 million cubic feet of gas. That’s a hefty financial incentive for which to use public funds.
Truth be told, the game of global gateway finance is a closed one. And there’s still Russia (and China) playing at the same table. In August 2014, Russia’s biggest oil company, Lukoil, estimated construction of the first branch of a pipeline to Iraq’s West Qurna-2 field at a cost of up to $1 billion. Lukoil holds a 75% stake in West Qurna-2 and has invested over $4 billion in the project, which is already producing more than 200,000 barrels of oil per day.
Cold-War Gateways: From Cuba to the Ukraine
The narrative of Russia's aggression vs. America’s fight for freedom dovetails with the turmoil going on in the Middle East. Both situations deflect attention from our country, which has greater inequality today than before Obama took office, despite a soaring stock market buoyed by the Fed's stimulus policy of pumping zero-interest rate money into banks providing them capital for all of these international adventures.
After Ukrainian President Poroshenko, a former banker and chocolate mogul, proclaimed the situation with Russia was much improved following his truce with Vladimir Putin, President Obama ratcheted up sanctions against Russia and corralled the rest of the Euro-squad to join him. This action was not about saving Kiev from pro-Russian rebels, but to reinforce the notion that the US is in financial control of the country. Poroshenko is no financial dummy, which is why he threw Putin and any potential Russian economic support under the bus, and high-tailed it to Washington for photo-ops and handouts.
These will come in the form of US government aid, more loans from the IMF and World Bank, plus complex transactions with US banks seeking more areas in which to funnel foreign capital, finance projects, and down the line, maybe securitize the resources of a new corner of the world and sell them to a fresh bunch of hungry speculators. The US has already provided $60 million in aid including food, body armor and communications equipment to the Ukraine to secure its place at this gateway table later.
Stepping back in time, my book, All the Presidents' Bankers illustrates how President Eisenhower's 1950s doctrine promoted a combination of US military and economic support to its non-communist allies. Aid from the then-new World Bank and IMF was provided in return for their commitment to provide open trade relationships and adapt policies advantageous to private western banks and corporations. The US government could thus achieve a dual military and financial stronghold. One such country was Cuba, which under Fulgencio Batista became a favorite spot from which to access Latin and South America. National City Bank (now Citigroup) established 11 branches in Havana alone, becoming Cuba’s principle US depository for American companies involved in the sugar industry and other businesses there. That changed with the Cuban revolution and Fidel Castro, who, in 1960, nationalized foreign bank assets. Bankers looked elsewhere to expand, as did the US government.
In Obama’s political-financial strategy, similar gateway strategies are in play. Obama, like all US presidents since Castro came into power, did the communist-bravado thing and extended sanctions. US bankers will reenter Cuba when US policy changes after Castro is truly gone, as they have during several periods before, notably when National City Bank sent an entourage of bankers led by Chairman Charles Mitchell in the 1920s to explore sugar, nickel, and other deals that eventually soured in the 1929 Crash.
The Ukraine is a modern Cuba with more lucrative resources. As with other US financial gateways, Obama supported the Ukraine faction amenable to financial relationships with the US and Europe relative to Russia. Ten years ago, the Bush administration supported Ukrainian leaders sympathizing with the US vs. Russia as well. None of this was because of any purported interest in dispersing democracy, but because the right leadership offers more capital market, foreign investment and resource control opportunities to private US firms.
The Ukraine signed a $10 billion shale gas deal with US oil giant Chevron to explore its Olesky gas deposit around the time it expressed a desire for closer partnerships with the EU. Its ousted ex-President Viktor Yanukovych's decision to subsequently shun an EU trade agreement in favor of Putin's offer of cheaper gas and a $15 billion aid package provoked internal unrest, as did its weak economy. The US denounced Russian-backed President Yanukovych, until he left his post, for he represented a potential loss of money, power and more financial access. Ukraine stands between Russian oil producers and European and Asian consumers, and is poised to profit from any growing energy demands from Western Europe, as could Western private firms. It also serves as a potential financial out-post for US banks hunting for the next hot resource-saturated capital market.
Ironically, on September 17, 2014, the National Bank of Ukraine did a 180 spin on its economic forecasts and promised positive growth of 1% next year. The government said this economic expansion would come through more favorable corporate and income tax laws that would attract outside investors along the lines of what the US and IMF and World Bank has wanted. (More private relationships of bankers with these entities are in All the Presidents’ Bankers.) The Ukraine received two parts of a $17 billion IMF bailout this year with the IMF saying it may need $19 billion more. This means a greater call on Ukraine’s future revenues in return for austerity measures and deregulated financial markets to private foreign interests.
The real battle between the US and Russia is over the gateway countries in political flux. The real winners will be the private banks and oil companies that will reap the strategic benefits from gateway control over related markets and resources, supported by military and political might, and augmented with speculative capital for years to come. American and global citizens, oblivious to all this, will be the losers in this global shell game.
Tuesday, July 01, 2014
Here Paul Craig Roberts is interviewed on The Voice of Russia regarding Washington's foreign policy, which is becoming increasingly unpopular in the U.S. and increasingly menacing in Ukraine and Russia. PCR's opening statement is "I think, perhaps, Americans are catching on to all of the lies. There are now other sources of information, other than the English-speaking Western media. And the account that the US gives, for example, of Ukraine is clearly a lie. And it takes a while before people catch on to the lies." This Russian English-language radio program is quite long, requiring two separate audio files, each taking about a minute to download. The transcript is in good English but leaves out a small amount of material, particularly near the end. But no matter, just listen to PCR's highly instructive replies to the questions put to him.
27 June 17:18
US war against Russia is already underway - expert
Read more: http://voiceofrussia.com/radio_broadcast/25298789/274016376/
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© Photo: RIA Novosti/Andrei Stenin |
How true is the spreading belief that President Obama has ruined US foreign policy, and how does it actually work? The Voice of Russia is discussing it with Paul Craig Roberts, former assistant secretary of the US Treasury, currently the chairman of The Institute for Political Economy.
Part I
Download audio file
Part II
Download audio file
VOR: The US media is pointing to a growing
dissatisfaction with President Obama's foreign policy, both among
Republicans and Democrats.
Speaking at
the Faith and Freedom Coalition’s conference in Washington Sen. Ted Cruz
said "Abroad, we see our foreign policy collapsing and every region in
the world is getting more and more dangerous".
According
to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll has registered an increasing
lack of faith in the president and his leadership, with 58 per cent of
Americans disapproving of the way Obama is handling foreign policy.
What is it that makes Americans unhappy?
Paul Craig Roberts:
Well, I think, perhaps, Americans are catching on to all of the lies.
There are now other sources of information, other than the
English-speaking Western media. And the account that the US gives, for
example, of Ukraine is clearly a lie. And it takes a while before people
catch on to the lies. I don’t think the majority will ever catch on,
but enough will.
And then many Americans who are
dissatisfied would be dissatisfied for domestic economic reasons. They
would want the resources wasted on wars to be allocated to domestic
needs and not used to pay for more wars. For example, the Iraq crisis
has come back and there is so much talk about sending troops to the
Baltics, eastern Europe in order to guard against the “Russian threat.”
So,
this alarms people who’ve had no income growth, who can’t find a job,
suffer from heavy debts from borrowed money to attend the universities,
cut backs of unemployment compensation, the threats to the social
security system, the threats to the public medical system (which is not
much of a system, but still some people rely on it).
So,
most Americans, when they see more trouble abroad involving more wars,
the US has been in war for 13 years. It’s wasted trillions of dollars
and achieved no result. And so, this is probably the main reason that
people are dissatisfied, because they are suffering here for the sake of
wars in which they no longer believe.
VOR: But what exactly is the rationale behind the never-ending wars?
There
are several reasons that are mutually supportive. One is that the
neoconservative ideology came to full power with the collapse of the
Soviet Union. And this ideology says that history has chosen the US to
prevail all over the world, that there is no alternative to the American
political and economic system, and that this choice by history gives
the US the responsibility to exercise hegemony over the entire world.
So,
this is a very powerful ideology, a more powerful ideology that the US
has ever before had. And it comes at a time when other ideologies are
gone. The communist ideology is gone, the Marxist revolutionary
movements are gone. And so, it leaves the US dominating on the
ideological level.
Another reason is the
military-security complex. It is an amazingly large and powerful private
interest group with government elements, such as all the security
agencies – the CIA, Homeland Security, FBI, the Pentagon. And it absorbs
hundreds of billions of dollars, probably close to one trillion dollars
annually.
And this money is very important to this
interest group. Some of the taxpayers’ money is recycled, it comes back
to Congress, it comes back to presidential candidates, as political
campaign contributions, thus ensuring their elections and reelections.
So, this is a second very strong force – a material interest that is
very much benefited by wars and a threat of wars.
And
the third very powerful interest group is the Israel lobby. Most of the
neoconservatives are Jewish ethnics. Many of them are Israeli-US
citizens. Almost all of them are closely tied to Israel. And so, the
neoconservative ideology of American hegemony fits in very well with the
13 years of wars in the ME, because these wars also serve a subsidiary
interest of disposing of the Arab states that are not aligned with the
US and Israel, and that could serve as a check on Israeli policy or
Israeli expansion in the ME.
So, these three come
together, they are all mutually supportive and in many ways it is the
same people. The neoconservatives are the same as the Israel lobby. The
officials in the Pentagon, in the State Department, they are also
neoconservatives. So, it is a very strong three-part foundation that
holds together.
VOR:
So, you are saying that the policy is largely defined by an Israeli
lobby. But the US policies in the ME actually endanger Israel.
Yes,
this is an unintended consequence of the policy. Some analysts tried to
warn the neoconservatives that the borders in the ME are artificial,
like the ones in Africa that were drawn up by the European colonists,
principally the English and the French.
So, you
have countries in which you have Shia majorities and Sunni minorities,
and then you have countries in which there is a reverse, Sunni
majorities and Shia minorities. And this is like the African boundaries
that were drawn bringing into the same country two warring tribes, who
traditionally were enemies. So, the boundaries of the states don’t make a
lot of sense. The boundaries could only have been drawn by ignorant
Westerners.
The Islamic confrontation between the
different sects was prevented by very strong secular rulers, such as
Saddam Hussein, who had a secular government, and Assad in Syria. These
were secular, non-Islamic governments that kept the conflict suppressed.
So, when you overthrow those governments, you release the conflict.
So,
what we see happening on the part of what they are calling ISIS or ISIL
is a reforming of borders. Parts of Syria and Iraq are becoming, if the
Islamists succeed, a new state. Now, we don’t know whether they will be
successful or not, but you can see that there is an impetus to create a
life separate from the artificial one created for them by colonial
imperialistic powers.
One of the reasons that the
breakup of Iraq and Syria was not seen as a threat to Israel, was the
Israeli and the neoconservative strategists, who reasoned – oh, this is
good, if we break up these states and they are fighting internally, there
won’t be any organized government to get in Israel’s way.
In
place of Iraq, there will be these warring factions. In place of Syria –
warring factions, just like in Libya today. And a state that has no
central government is no threat to Israel. And, therefore, we favor this
destruction of the political entities of these countries, because it
releases us from any sort of organized government’s opposition to
Israel’s theft of Palestine. Iraq no longer has a government, it has
warring parties, like in Libya, like Washington is establishing in
Syria.
So, this is the way the Israelis and the
neoconservatives see it. They do not see the destruction of secular
Muslim states as a threat, the fools see it as a destruction of a
unified country, which would reduce the ability of that country to
employ any sort of opposition to Israeli or American purposes.
VOR:
But in that case, wouldn’t the government and governmental institutions
be replaced by something like political and paramilitary organizations,
which we now term as extremist groups with which we are dealing now?
And wouldn’t those entities pose more threat, than individual
governments? Or do those people believe that they would be able to
control them somehow?
No, I don’t think they
think they can control them. And yes, they do pose a threat, because
they are not secular. That’s what I said. Some of us warned that this
would be the outcome. But we were ignored and primarily ignored because
the Israelis and the neoconservatives regarded the breakup of these
countries as less threatening.
VOR:
When you have been describing that neocon ideology with an idea of a
global mission, doesn’t it seem strikingly similar to something like the
Marxist ideology, to the communist ideology?
Yes,
that’s exactly what it is. The US is chosen by history. In Marxism
history chooses the proletariat. In the neoconservative ideology history
chose Washington.
VOR: Does that imply that, perhaps, those two ideologies could have a common root?
No,
I don’t think they have a common root, but their effect on the world is
the same, because it gives the country that expresses that ideology an
impetus to run over other countries and to establish itself, because it
sees itself as the sole legitimate system. And in that sense, the
Marxist and the neoconservative ideologies are the same, but the roots
are quite different.
And I think as well, you know, the
whole notion of the unipolar world, the American sole superpower, this
fits the financial interests very well. I left them out of my three-part
foundation that I spoke to you about, but in a way it is a four-part,
because of the American financial hegemony that now exists. This
financial hegemony is the reason Washington can put sanctions
on countries.
If your currency is not the world currency
and you don’t operate the world payment system, you can’t impose
sanctions. And so, the power to impose sanctions is also a power for
your financial institutions to prevail over the institutions of other
countries. So, this ideology that I'm talking about also appeals to Wall
Street, to the big banks, because it ensures their hegemony as well.
VOR:
But in that case, I start wondering – was it an intended implication
or, perhaps, unintended, again, that whatever the US has been doing for
the past ten years or even more has been strengthening China, which the
US seems to be identifying as its primary adversary. Now, you’ve been
mentioning the financial system. The Chinese start talking about
bringing their own currency into the world market as a new reserve
currency. And this has been largely thanks to all those crises, which
have been triggered off by the US.
What
the US did that gave China its economic beginning, was to offshore the
American manufacturing jobs. Industry and American manufacturing was
moved offshore by the capitalists under the pressure of Wall Street in
order to lower labor costs, in order to achieve higher earnings for
shareholders, for Wall Street and for the managers through bonuses.
And
so, it was a very shortsighted policy from the standpoint of national
interests, but it was in the interest of Wall Street and in the
individual interests of the chief executive officers of the
corporations.
Once China had the American technology
and the American business know how, it was free of American economic
predominance. And now, actually, China has a much more powerful economy,
certainly in manufacturing, than the US has.
Another
factor that contributed to weakening the American economic system was
the rise of the high-speed Internet, because now it is possible for
professional service jobs, such as engineering, software engineering,
computers, any type of engineering, any type of work that does not have
to be done on site, this work can be done anywhere in the world and sent
ion on the high-speed Internet.
This has given
countries like India and China the ability to put their people into jobs
that used to be filled by American university graduates. Again, it is a
cost saving for the corporations, Wall Street likes it, it increases
profits.
And so, this is where China’s rise came from.
It was an unintended consequence of globalism. Again, some of us warned,
I warned, I’ve been warning for ten or fifteen years, but they don’t
listen. They say – oh, it is just free trade, we will benefit. Clearly,
they were wrong, it is not free trade and we haven't benefited.
VOR:
But in that sense, does that imply that, perhaps, when we are talking
about the interests of large corporations VS national interests,
national interests are increasingly losing to the corporate?
In
the real sense, there is no longer an American national interest. There
is the interest of these powerful interest groups. And we’ve had these
recent studies from scholars who have found that the American public has
no input whatsoever into government decisions or into policy decisions.
The conclusion of the recent study, which looked at thousands of
government decisions, was that the American people have zero input into
the formation of policy.
So, in terms of anything being
done for the benefit of the people or the national interests in that
sense, nothing is done. What is done is for the benefit of about 6
powerful interest groups. And I’ve told you about the four, which I
think are the most powerful in terms of the foreign policy – the
question that you raised.
So, in that sense, the US is
sort of making itself vulnerable in many ways. For example, look at the
economic policy. For years now, in order to support a handful of large
banks the Federal Reserve is creating trillions of dollars, new dollars.
This
creation of dollars devalues the existing dollars that are held by
people around the world. They look and say – what are my dollar assets
going to be worth, when the Federal Reserve is creating so many new
dollars every year?
So, this has caused some thought
about leaving the dollar as the world reserve system. When the threat to
the real value of dollar denominated financial instruments comes on top
of the suffering from Washington’s financial bullying of sovereign
countries, the momentum grows for finding some other mechanism than the
dollar as a way of settling international transactions.
And
of course, the Chinese have said that it is time to de-americanize the
world. And the Russians said recently that we need to de-dollarize the
payment system. And so, we have this agreement with Russia and China on
the large energy deal which is going to be outside the dollar payment
system.
We see the BRICS, the five countries – India,
China, Russia, Brazil and South Africa – and they are talking about
settling their trade imbalances in their own currencies. And they are
even talking about creating a bank between themselves, like an IMF or a
World Bank.
So, those are the developments that come
from America’s misuse of the dollar as world reserve currency.
Washington uses the dollar to bully, they use it to sanction, they use
it give their financial institutions hegemony over others. And over
time, all of this creates animosity, worries. And then, when you add, on
top of that, all the new dollars that the Federal Reserve has created
since 2008, it creates a real financial worry. And so, I think, in that
sense, the US has weakened its position.
VOR:
But how far do you think the US might be prepared to go to protect the
dollar? Or, perhaps, those interest groups are no longer interested to
protect that particular currency. Perhaps, they have already taken some
kind of precautions.
From the standpoint of
Washington's power, losing the world currency role would be devastating,
because that’s the main basis for Washington's power. That’s why
Washington has financial hegemony, that’s why it can impose
sanctions on sovereign countries. So, if Washington loses this role, if
the dollar ceases to be the world reserve currency, we’ll see a dramatic
reduction in Washington's power.
All of the interest
groups that benefit from Washington’s power would find that a
disadvantage. Of course, most of these corporations are now global or
transnational. And they may have bank balances in many countries.
VOR:
But still, how far is Washington prepared to go? Could it afford
another war? When Saddam Hussein attempted to challenge the US Dollar
back in 2000, he had to pay a price. And we all know what kind of price
he did pay. Now, when China and Russia, and other countries are starting
to mull the idea, what kind of risk are they running?
They
are running a risk. We already know that the US has announced a pivot
to Asia, reallocating 60% of the American navy to the South China Sea to
control the flow of resources on which China depends. The US is
contracting to build a series of new air and naval bases running from
the Philippines to Vietnam in order to block China.
We
have witnessed this century the US withdraw from the ABM treaty with
Russia. We witnessed the US construct an ABM system and began deploying
it on Russia’s borders. The purpose of an ABM is to neutralize the
strategic deterrent of the other country.
We’ve seen
the US change its war doctrine, nuclear weapons are no longer to be used
only in retaliation to an attack. They are now a preemptive
first-strike force. This is clearly directed at Russia. The Ukraine is
directed at Russia. So, the war is already started, it is underway.
That’s what the Ukraine is about. It is the war against Russia.
And
the war against China is in preparation. The US takes the side of every
country that gets into a dispute with China, even over small things
that have nothing whatsoever to do with the US.
The US
is surrounding both countries with military bases. The US wants to put
Georgia, the birthplace of Joseph Stalin that was part of Russia for two
or three hundred years, they want to put that into NATO. They are going
to put Ukraine into NATO.
Washington broke all the
agreements that Reagan and Gorbachev had about not taking NATO into
eastern Europe. NATO is now in the Baltics. It is all across eastern
Europe. The former members of the Warsaw pact are now members of NATO.
So,
the war is already underway, it is clear. The US has been preparing for
years. And the Russians, they must be aware of this. If they are not,
they are in really deep trouble.
VOR: Can the US afford it?
Of
course! Sure! The reserve currency can pay its bills by printing money.
And that’s what Washington does. Washington prints the money.
VOR: But like you said, that creates a lot of risks.
Until
the reserve currency role is lost, there is no limit. Recently I saw
one of the advisors to Putin said that Russia needs to form some kind of
alliance with other countries and bring down the dollar as the world
reserve currency, that this is the only way to stop Washington’s
military aggression.
Of course, he is completely right.
But the question is – can they organize something that quick enough
that succeeds – because Europe is an American puppet state. Those
European governments are not independent. They are no more independent
than Hungary and Czechoslovakia and Poland were of the Soviet Communist
Party. And Japan is a puppet state, it is not an independent country.
So,
if you have the euro backing the dollar and you have the yen backing
the dollar, that’s a fairly strong position to be in. And so, it is
going to be difficult for Russia and China or whoever is interested to
make inroads in any sort of a rapid way.
And yet, we
can see... look what happened in Ukraine. Russia was focused on the
Olympics and the US stole Ukraine. Russia was paying no attention,
somehow the Sochi Olympics were more important. So, what happened –
Washington reached in, stole Ukraine. Now, this is a tremendous problem
for the Russian Government, for Putin, for his leadership.
Putin
has asked the Russia Duma to rescind the permission to use the Russian
troops in Ukraine. So, clearly, he is acting in a very restrained way.
He is trying to avoid conflict. He probably realizes that the conflict
will be much more dangerous to everybody than the neoconservatives in
Washington think.
But the question is – will Putin be
able to avoid conflict? What will Washington think? Will they think –
oh, this is a very reasonable man, we can make a deal. Or will they
think – look, he is scared, Russia is weak, lets’ push forward.
VOR:
It is interesting! I remember that George W. Bush in an interview to
the Wall Street Journal towards the end of his second term said
something about Putin, which was rather surprising to hear from him. He
said that Putin never failed him on any of his promises. So, the
assessment was rather positive than negative.
I
think that’s true. But you see, Washington’s propaganda has nothing to
do with facts. There is no propaganda like Washington propaganda.
Washington can control the explanation of anything. Putin can’t.
Americans believe that all the trouble in Ukraine was caused by Putin,
that he invaded, that he annexed, that he is behind all the trouble in
southeastern Ukraine today and that it is all Russia’s fault, and that
Russia is a threat, and that we have to arm ourselves against “the
Russian threat.” Washington is recreating the Cold War that it had with
the Soviet Union.
This is a very profitable way to
supply the US military-security complex with the taxpayers’ money. And
in some ways it is safer than a war, because the war in Afghanistan
didn’t go well, the war in Iraq didn’t go well. But if you can have a
Cold War and you don’t actually fight, you can keep it going for years,
just like the Cold War with the Soviet Union. And the Cold War built the
military-security complex in the US.
So, that’s at
least the backup line for Washington. I'm not sure that we can rely on
Washington to have the judgment not to push Washington’s takeover of
Ukraine into a hot war. It seems preposterous to think that Washington
would be in a hot war with China and Russia. These are two large
powerful countries. They have nuclear weapons.
But a
lot of preposterous things have happened. And governments often fall
under the sway of their own propaganda. And clearly, somebody in
Washington thinks that a nuclear war can be won, because otherwise, why
would they change the war doctrine so that nuclear weapons cease to be a
retaliatory force and become a first-strike weapon? Why would they
build antiballistic missiles and put them on Russia’s border and on
ships in the Black Sea and South China Sea.
It is clear
that some people in Washington believe that the US can win a nuclear
war. In fact, there was an article published several years ago in
Foreign Affairs, which is the principle journal of the Council on
Foreign Relations – an influential collection of strategic analysts and
former government officials. And they said the US is so far ahead of
Russia in nuclear weaponry, that we can very easily attack Russia and
suffer no retaliation. So, you have people that think that way.
VOR: But that experiment could cost us a planet.
That’s
exactly it! But look at WWI. Look how many empires it cost. It cost the
Tsar - Russia and its empire. It cost the Austrian-Hungarians, it
destroyed them. It destroyed the German ruling family. The war left
Great Britain dependent on US financial support.
VOR: Yes, true. But there were no nuclear weapons at that time.
There
is big propaganda that you can actually use nuclear weapons. I'm trying
to combat that. I had recently on my site articles by various
scientists pointing out that nobody wins.
VOR:
I'm absolutely amazed at how the Department of State is handling its
own propaganda, there is no real argumentation whatsoever. Why? Is it
that they no longer care to look credible?
It is
just the power. American foreign policy, how does it work? It is always
based on coercion or threats, bribes. If a bribe doesn’t work, you use a
threat. I mean, one of the main purposes of the NSA spying on the world
is to be able to blackmail all the government leaders. And they do that
very effectively. Everybody has got something they don’t want known.
So,
they use bribes, bank pools of money. First of all, Washington buys the
foreign leaders. If there is any holdout, they topple them, like Saddam
Hussein, Gaddafi. There have been several in South America that they’ve
simply just assassinated, because they wouldn’t obey. So, the foreign
policy of the US is a policy based on force. It is not based on
diplomacy or persuasion. It is based on brutal force.
What
does the State Department tell people – do what we say or we will bomb
you into the Stone Age. Remember? They told that to the Pakistani
leader. Do what we say. Now!
So, if you have that type
of attitude, it doesn’t matter whether you tell the truth or tell lies,
because you are the ruler, you are the one, you are the Caesar. And what
you say goes, true or false. And so, it is not important to you that it
is true, because you are not working on a diplomatic level.
This
is something that Putin and Lavrov – the Foreign Minister – don’t seem
to understand. They keep thinking that they can work something out with
Washington, if the Russian government is just reasonable enough and
shows enough good will.
This is a Russian delusion. Washington has no good will.
VOR: Are there any unintended consequences to that strategy, the way you see it?
Only
if people catch on and see at some point the reality--and this is what
Putin is relying on. At some point, what happens in Germany and France?
Will they realize and say – hey, look, the Americans are driving us into
a mess. What do we gain from the American hegemony over the world? How
do we gain from a conflict with Russia or China? Let’s stop this. Let’s
pull out.
If some country were to pull out of
NATO or pull out of the EU, then the cover up of Washington’s war crimes
by “the coalition of the willing” would have dissenters. Washington has
actually told the Congress that if the White House has NATO’s backing,
the president doesn’t need the permission of Congress to go to war. The
old quote – ‘absolute power corrupts absolutely’ is attributed to Lord
Acton. It is safe to conclude that Washington has been corrupted by
power.
I think one unintended consequence of
Washington’s brutal use of power is that it causes the NATO countries to
realize that they are being driven towards a conflict by a country that
is essentially insane and taking a fantastic risk with everyone’s life
and with the planet.
So, perhaps, the realization by
others of Washington’s danger to life is what Putin is hoping for. He is
hoping that the more Russia is reasonable and not provocative, and
doesn’t take provocative actions, the greater the chance that the German
Government or the French Government will realize that Washington’s
agenda does not serve mankind, and that Europe will take some steps to
extract themselves and their countries, and their people from
Washington’s control, in which case the American empire falls apart.
So,
I think that’s what Putin is betting on. He is not a fool, certainly
not, and he realizes the threat of a war, he can see it. And so, this is
probably why he’s asked the Russian Duma to rescind the permission to
use the Russian forces in Ukraine. He is trying to show the Germans, the
French – look, it is not me, it is not us.
I hope he
succeeds. The future of the world really depends on whether Putin’s use
of diplomacy can prevail over Washington’s use of force.
Read more: http://voiceofrussia.com/radio_broadcast/25298789/274016376/
Read more: http://voiceofrussia.com/radio_broadcast/25298789/274016376/
Sunday, June 15, 2014
Professor Stephen Cohen, prominent US scholar of Russian studies and author who advised George H.W. Bush in the late 1980s, speaks to RT about the mistakes of consecutive American administrations in their Russia policies, leading to the worst crisis in decades and the deterioration of political discourse in America, which prevents things from changing in Washington.
Cohen on Ukraine civil war: ‘Lincoln didn’t call Confederates terrorists’
Published time: June 14, 2014 13:08
Historical analogies may be inaccurate, but Americans may need to look at their own civil war and compare it to what is happening in Ukraine now. Today the US supports a murderous criminal adventure that has little to do with unifying the country.
This assessment came from Professor Stephen Cohen, prominent US scholar of Russian studies and author, who advised George H.W. Bush in the late 1980s. He spoke to RT about the mistakes of the consecutive American administrations in their Russia policies, the worst crisis in decades that they led to and the deterioration of political discourse in America that prevents things from changing in Washington.
Cohen challenged the narrative of the Ukrainian events dominating in the US, calling the military crackdown by the government an “unwise, reckless, murderous, inhuman campaign that Kiev is conduction against what are admittedly rebel provinces.”
“Lincoln never called the Confederacy terrorists,” the scholar pointed out. “He always said, no matter how bad the civil war was, fellow citizens he wanted to come back to the union. Why is Kiev calling its own citizens terrorists? They are rebels. They are protesters. They have a political agenda. Why isn’t Kiev sending a delegation there to negotiate with them?
“Their demands are not unreasonable. They want to elect their own governors – we elect our own governors. They want a say on where their taxes go – ‘no taxation without representation.’ We know what that is,” Cohen said. “There are extremists among them, but there are also people who simply want to live in a Ukraine that is for everybody. And instead the Kiev army, with the full support of the United States, is supporting this assault.”
‘Kremlin an essential ally Washington pushes away’
What the US doing with Ukraine now is alienating arguably the best potential ally it has now, Cohen said.“I am convinced that the most essential partner for the American national security in all of these areas from Iran to Syria, Afghanistan and beyond is the Kremlin, currently occupied by Putin. And the way the United States has treated Putin – I would call it a betrayal of American national interest.”
Russia helped the Obama administration save its face in Syria, where the president was pushed into bombing the country over chemical weapons. It helped make bridges with the new leadership of Iran to start the first serious negotiations in decades.
“Obama had within his grasp at last – because it was a failed foreign policy presidency for Obama – two achievements that would have been in American national interest. And they have slipped away almost in proportion to the degree that Obama pushed Putin away. Pushed Putin away so far that over Ukraine we [the US] could be on the verge of war with Russia.”
Cohen blames the US, particularly the Clinton administration for setting the world on a path that led it to the current confrontation between the West and Russia.
“This is the playing out of American policy of expanding NATO to Russia’s borders – for whatever reasons. It began with Clinton, was continued under the second George Bush, has been pushed by Obama. And that is the rooster that has come home to roost.”
“Some people in the 1990s… warned that this was going to happen. Now that it has, and the people would not take responsibility for it,” he said. “They would not say ‘OK, we were wrong, we have to rethink policy.’ Instead they say to people such as myself, ‘You are an apologist for Putin. You are serving the Kremlin, you are not a patriot.’”
‘Obama isolated himself on foreign policy’
This lack of ability to change policies is evident in the current administration, the scholar believes.“I had lunch with two men much older than me, who had served many presidents and who’ve known them personally. And they were agreed that this president more than anyone in their lifetime isolated himself on foreign policy.”
One anecdotal example Cohen cited is Obama’s refusal to talk to former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.
“I have heard – whether it’s true or not I don’t know – that President Obama has declined to meet privately with Henry Kissinger, who sees Putin twice a year. Kissinger probably knows Putin better than any American statesmen alive today and who has been consulted by so many presidents. Think what we might about Kissinger’s past, but he has already declared his criticism of American policy towards Russia. And Obama wouldn’t want to spend an hour with him, asking ‘Are we doing something wrong? Are we misperceiving the situation?’”
It’s no surprise that a leader, who doesn’t take into account various viewpoint on a problem cannot take a rational decision on tackling it, Cohen said.
“I ask for a president to be a person, who solicits the best and most diverse learned views involving an existing crisis, that’s all… A president has to bring in people with conflicting views whose legitimacy is based on their knowledge, their learning. A president who doesn’t do that is going to get us into a crisis that Obama and Clinton got us into.”
‘The only way to break orthodoxy is with heresy’
Unfortunately for America, it’s not only the White house that discourages debate now, but also American society in general, the professor said.“There is no debate of public opposition in this country about this, unlike the situation 20-25 years ago, when we had real debates and public fights,” he said. “I don’t know if they [the mainstream media – RT] know the truth and therefore are not telling the truth, or that they are just caught up in the myths that had been attached to Russia since the end of the Soviet Union.”
“An orthodoxy about Russia has formed in this country over 20 years,” he added. “And it’s not only wrong, it’s reckless. It led us to this crisis in Ukraine… The only way you can break orthodoxy is with heresy. Some of the things I say are regarded as heretical, treasonous, unpatriotic. But heresy is a good thing, when it’s needed.”
This situation is a sharp contrast to what happens in some other democracies, which don’t hush a public debate on foreign policy issues and don’t try to push opinions not liked by the political establishment into the ‘fringe press’.
“Germany, a relatively new democracy with a past as bad as Russia’s, could develop a democracy, where people can speak openly and feely without fear of failing to get a promotion or getting on an op-ed page. Two of three former German chancellors have blamed Europe for the crisis in Ukraine – not Russia.”
“Where are our former presidents? We know why President Clinton wouldn’t speak out, because he began that policy. But where is President Carter? Where are the former secretaries of state who pursued other policies? Why the silence? We’ve developed, I fear, a political culture within the establishment that is conformist. Even though the penalty of dissent in our country is cheap, unlike in many other countries.”
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Bomb, Bomb, Bomb Iran?

Two and a half years ago, I deduced that a false-flag attack on Iran using a purloined nuclear-armed cruise missile had been narrowly averted -- and that, had it not been, the Iranian retaliation using anti-ship missiles would have sunk the entire U.S. Fifth Fleet in the Persian Gulf within hours. Today, we read in the news that "Obama and other world leaders press Iran on its nuclear program." And as best as I can determine, the Fifth Fleet has been withdrawn from the "ducks-in-a-barrel" Gulf to the relative safety of the North Arabian Sea. Looking to what else I might mention in this context, I went to YouTube in search of an embeddable copy of the famous video showing John McCain doing his flagrant "Bomb, bomb, bomb Iran" Karaoke routine, only to discover that most had been removed and those that remain had been neutered by cutting them down to short clips that come across as a playful off-the-cuff gag lasting only a couple seconds. Now take a look at the following article, which appeared a couple weeks ago, ask yourself what you think War-President-II is up to now.
Final destination Iran?
Exclusive: Rob Edwards
Hundreds of powerful US “bunker-buster” bombs are being shipped from California to the British island of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean in preparation for a possible attack on Iran.
The Sunday Herald can reveal that the US government signed a contract in January to transport 10 ammunition containers to the island. According to a cargo manifest from the US navy, this included 387 “Blu” bombs used for blasting hardened or underground structures.
Experts say that they are being put in place for an assault on Iran’s controversial nuclear facilities. There has long been speculation that the US military is preparing for such an attack, should diplomacy fail to persuade Iran not to make nuclear weapons.
Although Diego Garcia is part of the British Indian Ocean Territory, it is used by the US as a military base under an agreement made in 1971. The agreement led to 2,000 native islanders being forcibly evicted to the Seychelles and Mauritius.
The Sunday Herald reported in 2007 that stealth bomber hangers on the island were being equipped to take bunker-buster bombs.
They are gearing up totally for the destruction of Iran
Dan Plesch, director, Centre for International Studies and Diplomacy, University of London
Although the story was not confirmed at the time, the new evidence suggests that it was accurate.
Contract details for the shipment to Diego Garcia were posted on an international tenders’ website by the US navy.
A shipping company based in Florida, Superior Maritime Services, will be paid $699,500 to carry many thousands of military items from Concord, California, to Diego Garcia.
Crucially, the cargo includes 195 smart, guided, Blu-110 bombs and 192 massive 2000lb Blu-117 bombs.
“They are gearing up totally for the destruction of Iran,” said Dan Plesch, director of the Centre for International Studies and Diplomacy at the University of London, co-author of a recent study on US preparations for an attack on Iran. “US bombers are ready today to destroy 10,000 targets in Iran in a few hours,” he added.
The preparations were being made by the US military, but it would be up to President Obama to make the final decision. He may decide that it would be better for the US to act instead of Israel, Plesch argued.
“The US is not publicising the scale of these preparations to deter Iran, tending to make confrontation more likely,” he added. “The US ... is using its forces as part of an overall strategy of shaping Iran’s actions.”
According to Ian Davis, director of the new independent thinktank, Nato Watch, the shipment to Diego Garcia is a major concern. “We would urge the US to clarify its intentions for these weapons, and the Foreign Office to clarify its attitude to the use of Diego Garcia for an attack on Iran,” he said.
For Alan Mackinnon, chair of Scottish CND, the revelation was “extremely worrying”. He stated: “It is clear that the US government continues to beat the drums of war over Iran, most recently in the statements of Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton.
“It is depressingly similar to the rhetoric we heard prior to the war in Iraq in 2003.”
The British Ministry of Defence has said in the past that the US government would need permission to use Diego Garcia for offensive action. It has already been used for strikes against Iraq during the 1991 and 2003 Gulf wars.
About 50 British military staff are stationed on the island, with more than 3,200 US personnel. Part of the Chagos Archipelago, it lies about 1,000 miles from the southern coasts of India and Sri Lanka, well placed for missions to Iran.
The US Department of Defence did not respond to a request for a comment.
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