[Media-watch] move on

Billy Clark billy.clark at ntlworld.com
Sat May 10 14:39:19 BST 2003


I've had a bit of a look at this and although slight on occasion it is 
an interesting round up.  Can't remember where it came from though.

billy


Dear MoveOn supporter,

The war in Iraq is over; the U.S. occupation of Iraq has now begun. In 
an unnecessary war, victory is never sweet: American and British 
soldiers, Iraqi civilians, and Iraqi soldiers lost their lives in a 
conflict that never should have happened. That's not victory, that's 
tragedy.

While global opposition failed to stop the war, we achieved something 
remarkable -- a unified world-wide grassroots working together to solve 
international problems. There are plenty of problems left to solve; it's 
our hope that we can build on the momentum started with opposition to 
the war to create true global democracy and security.

In service of that goal, we'll be providing an international bi-weekly 
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worse. This week's issue is a good example: it contains an expose of the 
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  The MoveOn Team

THE PROJECT FOR THE NEW AMERICAN CENTURY

MoveOn Bulletin
Friday, May 9, 2003
Noah T. Winer, Editor
noah.winer at moveon.org

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SPECIAL FEATURE: INTERVIEW SENATOR BYRD
This week, we kick off a feature of the new MoveOn Bulletin: the 
Grassroots Interview. In each issue, we'll provide an opportunity for 
MoveOn members to ask five questions of a prominent political figure. 
U.S. Senator Robert Byrd (D-WV) has graciously agreed to be the first 
subject. Senator Byrd has been in the news recently for his comments on 
President Bush's "victory" speech.

What are your questions for Senator Byrd? We'll ask MoveOn users' five 
favorite questions on Wednesday, and report the Senator's answers in the 
next issue. Post your questions and review others' at:
http://www.actionforum.com/forum/index.html?forum_id=255

CONTENTS:
1. Introduction: American Leadership, American Empire
2. One Link
3. Forming the Bush Doctrine
4. Pax Americana
5. September 11, 2001
6. Who's Steering This Ship?
7. Who Pays the Bills?
8. Pax Israelica?
9. Post-War Iraq
10. Neo-conservatism
11. What Next -- Syria? Iran?
12. Challenging the Project
13. Conclusion
14. About the Bulletin

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

INTRODUCTION: AMERICAN LEADERSHIP, AMERICAN EMPIRE
Many of us first heard about the Bush administration's plan to invade 
Iraq last August. However, a small group of political elites planned the 
takeover of Iraq years ago. With that goal achieved, now is the time to 
look at who these people are, how they created a war on Iraq, and most 
importantly their plans for the future.

The Project for the New American Century (PNAC) is a Washington-based 
neo-conservative think-tank founded in 1997 to "rally support for 
American global leadership." PNAC's agenda runs far deeper than regime 
change in Iraq. Its statement of principles begins with the assertion 
that "American foreign and defense policy is adrift" and calls for "a 
Reaganite policy of military strength and moral clarity."

While their tone is high-minded, their proposal is unilateral military 
intervention to protect against threats to America's status as the lone 
global superpower. The statement is signed by such influential figures 
as Dick Cheney, Jeb Bush, Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Dan Quayle, Donald 
Rumsfeld, and Paul Wolfowitz.

PNAC is not alone, nor did it arise from new wells of power. Most of the 
founding members of PNAC held posts in the Reagan or elder Bush 
administration and other neo-conservative think-tanks, publications, and 
advocacy groups.

The effect of PNAC's ideology is great on Bush -- the presidential 
candidate who promised a "humble," isolationist foreign policy. The 
events of September 11, 2001 provided a window of opportunity for 
furthering PNAC's agenda of American empire. Understanding that agenda 
can help us anticipate the Bush administration's next steps and organize 
accordingly.

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

ONE LINK
If you only read one article in this bulletin, it should be this one. 
This article from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel superbly covers the 
influence of PNAC in Bush's decision to go to war with Iraq. As the 
author writes, the goal is to transform the Middle East through a show 
of U.S. military might and "the obvious place to start is with Iraq, 
which was already in trouble with the United Nations, had little 
international standing and was reviled even by some Arab nations."
http://www.jsonline.com/news/gen/apr03/131523.asp

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

FORMING THE BUSH DOCTRINE
The motivating event for the neo-conservatives who founded PNAC was the 
end of the 1991 Gulf War in Iraq. With Saddam's power weakened, the 
neo-conservatives believed he should be eliminated permanently. Instead, 
the elder President Bush encouraged the Iraqi opposition to rise up 
against the Ba'ath government. As their rebellion was put down by Iraqi 
troops, Bush ordered the U.S. military not to intervene, choosing 
instead a strategy of containment for Saddam.

In 1992, Paul Wolfowitz, then-Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, 
authored an internal policy brief on America's military posture in the 
post-Cold War era: to prevent the emergence of a new rival power through 
preemption rather than containment and acting unilaterally if necessary 
to protect U.S. interests. When a draft was leaked to the press, 
controversy erupted and the report had to be softened.

The web accompaniment to the PBS Frontline special "The War Behind 
Closed Doors" features an excellent chronology showing how Wolfowitz's 
draft would become the basis of the Bush Doctrine.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/iraq/etc/cron.html

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

PAX AMERICANA
An important step in PNAC's chronology is its major publication, 
"Rebuilding America's Defenses: Strategy, Forces and Resources For a New 
Century" (RAD), released in September, 2000. The report takes 
Wolfowitz's draft as a starting point, hailing it as "a blueprint for 
maintaining U.S. preeminence, precluding the rise of a great power 
rival, and shaping the international security order in line with 
American principles and interests."

RAD rejects cuts in defense spending, insisting that "Preserving the 
desirable strategic situation in which the United States now finds 
itself requires a globally preeminent military capability both today and 
in the future." Core missions for the U.S. military include the ability 
to "fight and decisively win multiple, simultaneous major theater wars" 
and to reposition permanent forces in Southeast Europe and Southeast 
Asia.

Other samples from RAD:

"The United States has for decades sought to play a more permanent role 
in Gulf regional security. While the unresolved conflict with Iraq 
provides the immediate justification, the need for a substantial 
American force presence in the Gulf transcends the issue of the regime 
of Saddam Hussein."

"At present the United States faces no global rival. America's grand 
strategy should aim to preserve and extend this advantageous position as 
far into the future as possible."

"[N]ew methods of attack -- electronic, 'non-lethal,' biological -- will 
be more widely available ... 'combat' likely will take place in new 
dimensions: in space, 'cyber-space,' and perhaps the world of 
microbes ... advanced forms of biological warfare that can 'target' 
specific genotypes may transform biological warfare from the realm of 
terror to a politically useful tool."

In this Atlanta Journal-Constitution opinion piece, Jay Bookman compares 
"Rebuilding America's Defenses" with the current Bush defense policy.
http://www.rainbowbody.org/politics/PNACgoal.htm

You can read the entire document on PNAC's website.
http://www.newamericancentury.org/publicationsreports.htm

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

SEPTEMBER 11, 2001
In discussing changes to America's military strategy, the RAD report 
regretfully admits, "the process of transformation, even if it brings 
revolutionary change, is likely to be a long one, absent some 
catastrophic and catalyzing event -- like a new Pearl Harbor."

Shortly after September 11, PNAC sent a letter to President Bush 
welcoming his call for "a broad and sustained campaign" and encouraging 
the removal of Saddam even if Iraq could not be directly linked to the 
attacks.
http://www.newamericancentury.org/Bushletter.htm

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

WHO'S STEERING THIS SHIP?
"Most neo-conservative defense intellectuals have their roots on the 
left, not the right." Michael Lind argues in the New Statesman and Salon 
magazines that many were anti-Stalinist Trotskyists who became 
anti-communist liberals, then shifted to a "militaristic and imperial 
right with no precedents in American culture or political history."
http://dupagepeace.home.att.net/bush7.html

PAUL WOLFOWITZ is Deputy Defense Secretary, second-in-command at the 
Pentagon. Wolfowitz was promoting regime change in Iraq and a strategy 
of preemptive attack in 1992, but the elder Bush rejected his views as 
too radical. This is an excellent brief from the Carnegie Endowment for 
International Peace.
http://www.moveon.org/r?436

RICHARD PERLE was Assistant Secretary of Defense in the Reagan 
administration and a foreign policy adviser in George W. Bush's 
presidential campaign. He accepted Rumsfeld's offer to chair the Defense 
Policy Board, transforming it from obscurity to influence. In March, 
Perle resigned as chairman after a controversial lobbying scandal, but 
remains on the Board as a member.
http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/?030317fa_fact

WILLIAM KRISTOL is editor of The Weekly Standard, a conservative 
political magazine with a small but elite readership, funded by Rupert 
Murdoch. The son of neo-conservative founding father Irving Kristol, he 
is the president of PNAC.
http://www.mediatransparency.org/people/bill_kristol.htm

Other important participants are Vice-President Dick Cheney; Defense 
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld; Iran-contra scandal convict Elliott Abrams, 
now Director of Middle East Affairs for the National Security Council; 
Washington Post columnist Robert Kagan; and special presidential envoy 
to Afghanistan and Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad.

A fairly complete list of PNAC participants can be found here:
http://www.opednews.com/new%20american%20century.htm

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

WHO PAYS THE BILLS?
The Bradley Foundation, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, is the primary funder 
of PNAC through PNAC's parent New Citizenship Project, Inc. With the 
largest assets of any right-wing foundation, Bradley has focused its 
efforts on ending affirmative action, reforming welfare, and privatizing 
schools. This article describes Bradley's funding of neo-conservative 
think-tanks, magazines, and books like "The Bell Curve."
http://www.mediatransparency.org/funders/bradley_foundation.htm

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

PAX ISRAELICA?
Nearly all PNAC participants, whether Jewish or Christian, are 
right-wing Zionists who support Ariel Sharon's Likud Party. In 1996, 
Richard Perle, Douglas Feith, and others drafted a paper for incoming 
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urging him to make "a clean break" 
from the Oslo peace process preferring "peace through strength," 
including the ouster of Saddam Hussein.
http://www.israeleconomy.org/strat1.htm

This essay describes many of the familiar neo-conservatives as having 
"dual loyalties," making policy decisions in the interests of the State 
of Israel as much as the United States.
http://www.counterpunch.org/christison1213.html

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

POST-WAR IRAQ
PNAC participants are backing Ahmed Chalabi of the Iraqi National 
Congress in his bid to run the interim government in Iraq. From The 
American Prospect, who is Chalabi and why is he so popular with the 
neo-conservatives?
http://www.prospect.org/print/V13/21/dreyfuss-r.html

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

NEO-CONSERVATISM
PNAC is in the same Washington, D.C. office building as the American 
Enterprise Institute (AEI), another major neo-conservative think-tank. 
They share far more than an address: PNAC participants like Richard 
Perle, Thomas Donnelly, Jeane Kirkpatrick, William Schneider, Lynne 
Cheney (Dick Cheney's wife), and Irving Kristol (William Kristol's 
father) are all AEI scholars and fellows.

Similar overlap is found among all the neo-conservative think-tanks -- 
Hudson Institute, Center for Security Policy, Washington Institute for 
Near East Policy, Middle East Forum, and Jewish Institute for National 
Security Affairs -- giving the agenda of a few political elites the 
appearance of widespread agreement.

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

WHAT NEXT -- SYRIA?
This piece from Foreign Policy in Focus discusses a 2000 Middle East 
Forum study calling for military force against Syria. The report, 
"Ending Syria's Occupation of Lebanon: The U.S. Role," was signed by 
numerous PNAC participants.
http://www.fpif.org/commentary/2003/0304uscfl.html

IRAN?
 From the Washington Monthly, a smart article that compares the 
neo-conservative plan for the Middle East to "giving a few good whacks 
to a hornets' nest because you want to get them out in the open and have 
it out with them once and for all."
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2003/0304.marshall.html

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

CHALLENGING THE PROJECT FOR THE NEW AMERICAN CENTURY
The Peace Education Fund and California Peace Action have launched a 
national advertising campaign that features the infamous photo of Donald 
Rumsfeld shaking hands with Saddam Hussein. The ads ask the question: 
"Who Are We Arming Now?" The ad is part of Peace Action's Campaign for a 
New American Foreign Policy which is building political pressure for an 
alternative to the bleak vision of the Project for the New American 
Century.
http://www.moveon.org/r?437

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

CONCLUSION
Beyond all the specifics presented in this bulletin and the linked 
resources, it's essential to remember how interlocked the 
neo-conservative organizations are. They represent the views and 
interests of only a tiny elite, not the popular sentiment in the United 
States. Most Americans would be horrified to learn how PNAC and others 
are shaping the Bush Doctrine -- both because of the ideology they 
describe and because they use money and media to gain disproportionate 
political influence.

Money makes it easy to organize networks and gain political influence; 
control of the media limits our ability to consider the various options 
America has for handling crises in the international community. The work 
we are doing as MoveOn members is organizing without massive wealth and 
educating without owning the media. Our work is to vocalize the love of 
democratic decision-making shared by all people, clearly and with the 
most complete information. Please let us know what information you need 
to do this work, and we will do our best to make it available through 
the bulletin.

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

CREDITS
Research team:
Leah Appet, Joanne Comito, Lita Epstein, Anna Gavula, Terry Hackett, 
Zaid Khalil, Kate Kressmann-Kehoe, Cameron McLaughlin , Janelle Miau, 
Sarah Parady, Kim Plofker, and Ora Szekely.

Editing team:
David Taub Bancroft, Melinda Coyle, Nancy Evans, Eileen Gillan, and Rita 
Weinstein.

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

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