Do
you want to know who the
Americans running Iraq really are?
PressInfo # 183 -
Part 3
May
14, 2003
By
Jan
Oberg, TFF
director
Continued from Part
2.
ORHA, the Office of
Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance
L. Paul Bremer and General Jay Garner and a team of
some 300 retired military men, diplomats and
functionaries from numerous government agencies have been
"recruited" or "appointed" by the Bush administration
and, especially, by the Pentagon to administer postwar
Iraq through the Office
of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance that
comes under Pentagon. Here are the backgrounds and
profiles about some of them. Interestingly, there are
very few questions asked in the free press about this
completely undemocratic, ambiguous method to take over a
country and shape its future.
JAY
GARNER
Governor -
Co-ordinator
Retired US general, pro-Israel from the defence
industry, with a past job in Northern Iraq, supposed to
be the highest authority
Sometimes called the new "viceroy" of Iraq, Retired
Lieutenant General Jay Garner is the man in charge of
the Office
of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance.
Here is how
the New York Times presents Jay Garner. And
here follows a critical background
from The Guardian:
"There is no argument among Arab opinion
formers, who with rare unanimity have been condemning
his appointment as another sign of American contempt
for Iraqi feelings,"
"One is the general's work since retiring from the
army as president of defence contractor SY Coleman,
now part of a communications-led outfit called L3. An
L3 spokesman insisted that Gen Garner's firm does not
make military hardware but specialises in the guidance
systems. In other words, he is the man who has been
trying to make sure the weapons hit the targets rather
than the surrounding civilians. This may be true, but
this might require an over-subtle explanation in the
Baghdad souks if Iraqis start to believe they are
being ruled by a man who was just trying to kill
them."
And here is a
sympathetic portrait of Garner, the DeSoto native who
will lead the transformation of faraway Iraq, from
HeraldTribune.com. The Sydney
Morning Herald paints a rather sceptical
portrait of Garner from the perspective of "the critical
glare of Arab eyes."
However, here is a thorough documentation of Jay
Garner's past and relations - by human rights people who
have set up a whole website "StopJayGarner.com".
Another, Pacific News Service, provides an
analysis
that is also pretty devastating for Garner in his
role as future civilian governor of Iraq.
What we learn from the materials on these sites is
that Garner has been involved with the weapons
manufacturing company SY
Coleman, with the Patriot Missile system, and with
the Star Wars project. He has been director of the
Provide Comfort Program, the operation that coordinated
humanitarian help in Iraqi's Kurdish territory at the end
of Gulf War I. Assigned to that position by then
Secretary of Defense, Dick Cheney, Garner oversaw an
office that was created by a U.N. mandate. Now he is
appointed by the Pentagon (Rumsfeld/Wolfowitz) to rebuild
and run Iraq.
Garner has been associated with The Jewish Institute
for National Security Affairs, JINSA,
and participated in its JINSA October 2000 Statement.
This statement is explained
by JINSA here. It has remarkable formulations
praising Israel's remarkable restraint and denoucing the
Palestinians with generalising formulations such as, "We
are appalled by the Palestinian political and military
leadership that teaches children the mechanics of war
while filling their heads with hate."
Given that Israel is seen as the security problem par
excellence by Iraqis, it will be interesting to see
whether General Garner will be able to build confidence
with any Iraqi who knows where his basic loyalties
lie.
It will also be interesting to see whether he has a
chance to win the hearts and minds of the Iraqis. Upon
his first visit to Baghdad on April 21, BBC
reported:
Iraq's main Shia groups are boycotting
talks with Mr Garner
The retired US general sent to lead an interim
administration has begun assessing the damage the war
inflicted on Baghdad, where large parts of the
population are still without water or electricity.
Jay Garner flew into Baghdad insisting he was a
"facilitator not a ruler", but opposition appeared to
be growing to the invading forces taking a leading
role in the reconstruction.
A Kurdish leader, Jalal Talabani, said he objected to
any "foreigner" leading an administration for
Iraq.
Groups representing the majority Shia Muslim
population have already said they will not co-operate
with a US administration and are boycotting talks led
by Mr Garner.
In addition, his appointment - and that of all the
other people with military backgrounds - raises the issue
of militarised civilian reconstruction. It has already
drawn criticism from many and different experts, e.g.
Sara Kenyon Lischer in the Christian
Science Monitor of April 15 and Larry Thompson of
Refugees International on Reuters
AlertNet April 9, 2003.
Garner, to be sure, has set up ORHA
in a 258-room Republican Palace on the banks of the
Tigris River. But he is not going to enjoy that for any
long time. It is expected that he will be replaced by
Bremer by mid-May.
JARED L.
BATES
Garner's chief of
staff
Retired lieutenant general and top guy of US
mercenary-consultancy firm, MPRI
Like many others, Bates
served in Vietnam and has had all kinds of military
assignments and received many medals. Here is his
relations
to MPRI. Here is a short,
critical description of MPRI:
Insiders joke that MPRI has more generals
than the Pentagon. This high level mercenary group has
over 1000 elite military and law enforcement leaders
on retainer, including Gen. Ed Soyster, former head of
the Defense Intelligence Agency, Gen. Frederick
Kroesen, former commander of the U.S. Army in Europe
and a former Assistant Director of the FBI Many of its
employees serve on the Council of Foreign Relations.
The President, Carl Vuono was the Army Chief of Staff
during the invasion of Panama and the Gulf War. He
retired after the war and joined MPRI in 1991. One of
his first big jobs was advising the Croatian
government when it split away from Yugoslavia. He is
credited with the victorious military strategy of
lightning armor drives that were used against the
Serbs. MPRI is a military consultancy and also
supplies pilots and Special Forces and elite training
and security services worldwide. They recently
completed an $800,000 contract to review and advise
the Colombian military. MPRI also runs the US Army's
college program, the ROTC, at over 200 US univesities.
And here is the MPRI
website. Garner
and Bates worked for subsidiaries of the same defence
contractor, L-3 Communications Systems.
We have not been able to find evidence that he has any
particular qualifications or experience in post-war
civilian reconstruction, socio-political and economic
development, nation-building or reconciliation.
LARRY
DiRITA
Top adviser to
Garner
Rumsfeld's senior aide in Iraq, US Navy, worked for
Republican senators and the conservative Heritage
Foundation
Just below J. Garner, who reports to T. Franks, is a
line to Larry DiRita, who is a special assistant to the
defense chief. He is Rumsfeld's senior aide and a
Naval Academy graduate. Larry
Di Rita joined the Department of Defense after
serving as Legislative Director, then Chief of Staff, for
U.S. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison [R-Texas] from
1996 until 2001. Prior to that, he served as Policy
Director to the 1996 Presidential campaign of U.S.
Senator Phil Gramm. Previously, he served at the Heritage
Foundation as Deputy Director of Foreign Policy and
Defense Studies. DiRita is a veteran of the U.S. Navy.
His final tour was on the Joint Staff under General Colin
Powell. He is a graduate of the United States Naval
Academy, and he has a Master's Degree from the Johns
Hopkins University School of Advanced International
Studies.
We have not been able to find evidence that he has any
particular qualifications or experience in post-war
civilian reconstruction, socio-political and economic
development, nation-building or reconciliation.
RON
ADAMS
Deputy director of
ORHA
Former SFOR commander in Bosnia and Croatia,
consultant for many companies
Retired
General Adams served in a wide variety of command and
staff positions in Vietnam; Korea; around the Pacific
Rim; in the Middle East and in Europe, including service
as Commander of the NATO led thirty-four nation
Stabilization Force, SFOR, in Bosnia-Herzegovina and
Croatia. Although much of his service was outside the
continental United States, General Adams also served on
the Army General Staff, the Army Secretariat and the
Joint Staff, during multiple tours of duty in the
Pentagon.
Since leaving active duty, General Adams has worked as a
consultant for a number of large companies and serves on
several advisory boards for non-profit organizations, a
private foundation and a public university.
We have not been able to find what companies Ron Adams
has served. We have not been able to find evidence that
he has any particular qualifications or experience in
post-war civilian reconstruction, socio-political and
economic development, nation-building or
reconciliation.
BARBARA
BODINE
Co-ordinator of
Central Iraq
A past in Iraq and Kuwait, controversial, an exception
by being close to State Department - and suddenly
leaving
To be based in Baghdad. Barbara
Bodine, the former US ambassador to Yemen who served
in Baghdad in the 1980s, will look after the central
region, including Baghdad. Ms
Bodine was held hostage at the US embassy in Kuwait
during the 1991 Gulf War. She is reportedly one of a
group of State Department Arabists who made it on to the
team after the Pentagon rejected a number of former US
ambassadors and diplomats. There seems to have been quite
some controversy about her ways of handling the
investigation following the
attack on USS Cole in the Port of Aden which happened
in October 2000 when she was US ambassador to Yemen.
Bodine
has worked for former Republican presidential
candidate Bob Dole and former Republican secretary of
state Henry Kissinger, and served under presidents Ronald
Reagan and George Bush Sr. Here is an official
CV. And here is a recent critical
comment about her from the Washington
Post.
On May 11 and 12, VOA announced that Brodine
has resigned or, rather, abruptly
called back to Washington.
ROGER "BUCK"
WALTERS
Co-ordinator of
Southern Iraq
Retired general, Texas businessman, with a past, like
many others, in Vietnam
Another retired general and Texas businessman, will
oversee the south. He is one more in the group who has
been hand-picked by the Pentagon. This is what
CBC News has to tell about him:
His territory will extend from the borders
with Saudi Arabia and Kuwait to just north of Karbala.
The team will eventually set up camp in Basra after
the fighting subsides. Walters retired from the army
after serving for 32 years. Since then, he has worked
for an insurance company in Texas and told the
Washington Times that he plans to be back at his desk
job in less than a year. He told the paper he never
considered turning down the job. "I served my country
for 32 years, and I would not like to think about
sitting on my porch having said no. This is a time of
history, and I want to be here," he said.
In 1966, General
Walters served in Vietnam in Project
Delta and in command of a Special Forces camp.
Returning to Vietnam in 1969, General Walters served as a
Battalion S3 and later as Deputy G1 in the 101st Airborne
Division.
We have not been able to find evidence that he has any
particular qualifications or experience in post-war
civilian reconstruction, socio-political and economic
development, nation-building or reconciliation.
BRUCE
MOORE
Co-ordinator of
Northern Iraq
Retired army general with ties to US
mercenary-consultancy company MPRI
Retired army major general, Bruce Moore, has been
appointed coordinator for Northern Iraq with his base in
Mosul. This is how Fox News presents his background:
Prior to his appointment to ORHA, Moore
served at PAE Government Services, Inc. as consultant
on a joint Department of State and Department of
Defense initiative to solicit the support of the
countries of Mauritania, Mali, Sudan and Chad in the
War on Terrorism.
At MPRI, in Alexandria, VA General Moore served
from 2000-2001 as a Program Manager for Military
Stabilization Program for Bosnia-Herzegovina, a
multi-million dollar program that assisted the Bosnian
Government in establishing a NATO compatible Ministry
of Defense and Armed Forces. Moore also directed the
Nigeria Assessment, an in depth assessment of the
actions required to insure a successful transition
from a military government to a civilian
government.
PAE
has grown from designing bridges to installing
offshore oil platforms to supplying entire labor forces
to maintaining extensive military installations and
bases. And MPRI, Military
Professional Resources, Inc., is one of those
para-military, private mercenary companies that also, for
instance, "stabilised" Macedonia in 2002.
We have not been able to find evidence that he has any
particular qualifications or experience in post-war
civilian reconstruction, socio-political and economic
development, nation-building or reconciliation.
LEWIS W.
LUCKE
Co-ordinator for
reconstruction and USAID director of Iraq
Relevant education and broad international experience
in development matters
A Senior Foreign Service Officer, Lucke has served for
24 years at the U.S. Agency for International Development
((USAID) in seven overseas posts. He served as USAID
Mission Director in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, from
2000-2001, where he managed the largest U.S. development
program in the Western Hemisphere. More about him
here.
He is also the US
AID Mission director in Iraq. He has a degree in
international studies, have worked in development
programmes in many countries and is, thus, one of the few
whose background, education and experience may be
relevant to the Iraqis.
GEORGE F.
WARD
Co-ordinator for
humanitarian assistance
Marine Corps and State Department man, experience from
Germany unification and with
Kosovo-Albanians
Until George
F. Ward, Jr. was appointed to go to Iraq, he directed
the US Institute for Peace's Training Program. He joined
the Institute in 1999 after a thirty-year career in the
Foreign Service, which concluded with his appointment as
United States ambassador to the Republic of Namibia in
1996-99. In Namibia, he managed a successful humanitarian
de-mining program and initiated a campaign against gender
violence. As principal deputy assistant secretary of
state for international organization affairs in 1992-96,
he helped formulate United States policy on multilateral
peacekeeping and managed the policy process on United
Nations political questions.
During his assignment as deputy chief of mission in
Germany in 1989-92, Ward played a leading role in the
negotiations that led to German unification. He received
the State Department's Distinguished Honor Award for his
service in Germany. During earlier Foreign Service
assignments in Germany, Italy, and Washington, he worked
extensively on European security questions. Prior to his
Foreign Service career, Ward was an officer in the United
States Marine Corps, serving in the United States and
Vietnam. He holds a B.A. in history from the University
of Rochester and an M.P.A. with a concentration in
systems analysis from Harvard University.
Here is one more who has a background in the Marine
Corps, but belongs to the minority who comes from the
State Department and has a relevant education and working
experience. In September 1999, in the aftermath of NATO's
bombing of Yugoslavia, he
helped various groups of Kosovo-Albanians agree on
co-operation toward democracy.
TIM
CROSS
Deputy to Jay
Garner
A British exception with an interest in Christian
ethics
On April 14, 2003, Foreign Secretary Jack Straw was in
Kuwait, where he was meeting Jay Garner, the US interim
administrator for Iraq. As he arrived, Mr
Straw named Major General Tim Cross as the UK's chief
representative - one of three deputies to former US. He
has written a paper on Christian
ethics in military decision-making; in this paper he
defines leadership as winning the hearts and minds of
people.
Tim
Cross has served in Desert Storm, Bosnia, Macedonia,
Kosovo and Albania.
DOUGLAS J
FEITH
Pentagon
Under-secretary of Defense for Policy, pro-Israel, Perle
man, favours Iraqi-exiles taking over, a security policy
hawk for years with business relations in Israel and
defence contracting
Douglas
Feith is another staunch "compassionate"
conservative, assisting Garner. Feith, 49, is
Under-secretary of Defense for Policy and is putting
together the bureaucratic framework for rebuilding Iraq.
This is what the Post-Gazette
of Pittburg has to say about him:
"A policy wonk who cut his teeth in the
Reagan administration, Feith hangs out with a Pentagon
faction that has advocated war with Iraq for years and
wants to install exiled Iraqis as the next government.
Some in the State Department worry that an exile-run
regime could lead to accusations the United States is
setting up a puppet government.
In some ways Feith is an odd choice for any effort
involving an Arab country because of his strong
pro-Israel sympathies and fierce disregard for the
Palestinian Liberation Organization."
Feith
was managing attorney of Feith & Zell, P.C.
During the Reagan Administration, Mr. Feith served on the
White House National Security Council staff and in the
Department of Defense as Deputy Assistant Secretary of
Defense for Negotiations Policy and as Special Counsel to
Richard Perle, Assistant Secretary of Defense for
International Security Policy.
Here is an interview/briefing
with Douglas Feith, dated as early as February 21,
2003 in which the role of the civilian coordinators
are played up and Garner's played down.
Well, there is more interesting stuff about Feith.
Here are excerpts from a background article by the
Council
for a Livable World. Feith was a leader in the effort
to block ratification of the Chemical Weapons Convention
which was negotiated by former President George Bush. He
criticized the Reagan-brokered Intermediate Nuclear
Forces Treaty. Feith has claimed the ABM treaty is
obsolete and has criticized attempts to bring peace to
the Middle East, especially the Oslo Accords. His
backward policy positions extend to non-defense issues:
he has objected in print to mothers working outside the
house: "The sources of this anarchism are 30 years of
liberal social policy that have put our children in day
care, taken God out of the schools, taken Mom out of the
house, and banished Dad as an authority figure from the
family altogether."
There are other significant Feith statements here.
Here is Feith's
business connection:
The Fandz International Law Group was
established in 1999 with the formation of Zell,
Goldberg & Co. and its alliance with Feith
& Zell, P.C. Following the
reorganization of Feith & Zell, P.C., precipitated
by the appointment of our colleague Douglas J. Feith
as Undersecretary of Defense for Policy in the George
W. Bush Administration in 2001, the Fandz
International Law Group now encompasses the strategic
alliances between Zell, Goldberg & Co. and its
offices in Moscow (Moiseev, Khalimon & Co.),
Washington, D.C. (in cooperation with Shapiro, Sher
& Guinot, P.A) and in Seattle, Washington.
Just browse this
website and you will see its connections to Israel
including defence contracting. Zell, Goldberg & Co.,
the Israeli affiliate of the FANDZ International Law
Group, has quickly established itself as one of Israel's
fastest-growing business-oriented law firms. With
offices in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, together with
affiliated offices in Washington, D.C. and Moscow, as
well as in Europe through the Eurolegal membership, Zell,
Goldberg acts on behalf of a wide spectrum of
multinational and domestic clients with interests in
Israel and throughout the world. Zell, Goldberg provides
its clientele with legal support in a broad range of
legal disciplines including international security and
anti-terrorism law.
Here in an excerpt from a National
Journal article about this rightwing ideological
crusader:
"When the regular intelligence channels,
especially in the CIA, were reporting no links between
Iraq and Al Qaeda, Feith assembled his own small shop
of analysts to arm Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
with counterpoints for interagency debates. More
recently, Feith has been overseeing the creation of
Garner's team to administer postwar Iraq.
The author goes on mentioning that Feith criticised
the first Bush administration for being soft on Syria; he
has worked for Benjamin Netanyahu but found him too soft
on the Palestinians and believed that the Palestinian
authority should be disarmed by force...
Feith is a member ex officio also of the US Institute
for Peace. We have not been able to find evidence that he
has any particular qualifications or experience in
post-war civilian reconstruction, socio-political and
economic development, nation-building or
reconciliation.
RYAN
HENRY
Feith's immediate
deputy
Defence intellectual and Vice President of SAIC
corporation that is engaged in re-shaping the media and
information system of Iraq
Here
is his official bio. Christopher Ryan Henry of
Virginia, Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Policy.
Mr. Henry is currently the Corporate Vice President for
Strategic Assessment and Development at Science
Applications International Corporation (SAIC). Prior to
joining SAIC, he was a Senior Fellow at the Center for
Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), where he led
the Information-based Warfare initiative and served as
Director of the "Conflict in the Digital Age Project."
Henry graduated with merit from the U.S. Naval Academy
and graduated top in his class from the National Defense
University. He also has advanced degrees in Aeronautical
Systems from the University of Florida and in Systems
Management and Public Policy from the University of
Southern California.
Here is how Captain
Henry thought about Iraq and Operation Desert Fox in
1998. More importantly, please observe Henry's
association with the Science Applications International
Corporation, SAIC.
It's a high-technology research and engineering company
based in San Diego, California, SAIC engineers and
scientists work to solve complex technical problems in
national and homeland security, energy, the environment,
telecommunications, health care, transportation and
logistics. It's President/CEO makes a particular point of
the fact that SAIC
proudly supports all those on the front lines of our
national defense, in the U.S. and abroad.
SAIC Magazine reports on the corporations work for
defence, security, safety, border control technology etc
as well as for Homeland Defence, and holds articles about
e.g. Iran capabilities of weapons of mass-destructive
weapons.
SAIC is relevant to our investigation for two other
reasons. SAIC employes members of the Iraqi
Reconstruction and Development Council, IRDC,
[see later under Chosen Iraqis] many of whom are
to be part of the temporary government, holding positions
in the more than 20 ministries. IRDC was established in
February 2003. Now, until October 2002, the Vice
President of SAIC, i.e. the person preceding Ryan Henry
was David Kay.
We have not been able to find evidence that he has any
particular qualifications or experience in post-war
civilian reconstruction, socio-political and economic
development, nation-building or reconciliation.
DAVID
KAY
Not in Iraq,
but: Defence intellectual, former IAEA inspector in Iraq,
allegedly involved in intelligence work, former Vice
President of SAIC Corporation that seems to employ
exile-Iraqis working in post-Saddam Iraq, expert in
counter-terrorism and homeland defence
Kay was IAEA weapons inspector in Iraq in the early
1990s. He is also former Vice President of SAIC and
coordinator of SAIC's homeland security and
counterterrorism initiatives. He left IAEA in 1992, some
sources say he worked for US intelligence, however his
boss at the time, Dr. Hans Blix siad he left because he
had applied for the job of Secretary-General of the
London-based Uranium Institute, a post which Mr. Kay had
applied for well before September 1991, when his name
attracted worldwide media attention in the Baghdad
parking lot incident during the sixth IAEA inspection
mission in Iraq," says Dr.
Blix. Here
is his own views on the spying issue.
Here is his
most recent official bio. Again, we meet a defence
intellectual, engaged in homeland security and
anti-terrorism. A business man and who participates in
numerous official U.S. government delegations and
government and private advisory commissions, including
the US Defence Science Board where issues such as terror,
ballistic missile defence and psychological warfare is on
the agenda.
He is critical of the post-Saddam efforts to find
weapons of mass-destruction. "Unity of command is not
present," said Kay, who is now a senior fellow at the
nonprofit Potomac
Institute for Policy Studies. "There's not even unity
of effort. ... My impression is this has been a very low
priority so far, and they've put very little effort into
it." His
views on issues of Iraqi WMD and the need to remove
Saddam - also since he is a threat to the US itself -
is as hawkish as anyone's as can judged from his
statement to the Armed Services Committee of September
2002.
According
to one source SAIC also run the "Voice of the New
Iraq", the radio station established on 15 April 2003
at Umm Qasr that is funded by the US government. Danna
Harman has a telling
report about this radio station and other media
matters in the Christian Science Monitor; she
maintains that the station is operated by Robert Reilly.
Who is he?
We have not been able to find evidence that he has any
particular qualifications or experience in post-war
civilian reconstruction, socio-political and economic
development, nation-building or reconciliation.
ROBERT
REILLY
Manages media in
Iraq
Former director of Voice of America, VOA. A "vigorous
cold warrior" Reaganite, associated with the Heritage
Foundation, controversial, with a special view of what
media is for...
Here is how Reilly recently explained his media
philosophy and the role of VOA in The
Washington Times:
"But delivering the news is not enough. And
that is why the VOA was never envisaged as simply a
news organization. We also have the duty to reveal the
character of the American people in such a way that
the underlying principles of American life are
revealed. We owe it to our listeners to show them how
free people live &emdash; and to correct the image of
the United States that our own popular culture has
sometimes created in their minds, a false image that
has often helped fuel anti-Americanism."
There are reports like this about him: VOA
Head: Homosexuality 'Morally Disordered' - Robert
Reilly Served as a Visiting Fellow with the Heritage
Foundation, a Conservative Think Tank. Reilly
resigned in late August, 2002, "to seek opportunities
in which I can more directly employ my talents in helping
support the President and this Administration in the war
against international terrorism." In her sympathetic
portrait of him, Mona
Charen writes that "Reilly is a brilliant star in the
Pantheon of the Unconfused. A former vigorous cold
warrior who served in the Reagan administration, he is
the long-time host of "On the Line," a news program of
Worldnet." He seems to have been asked to resign over
the
issue of VOA's role vis-a-vis terrorist states.
The Christian Science Monitor reports that "The
station is being set up by Robert Reilly, a former Voice
of America director, and is paid for by the Pentagon. "We
are the voice of the new Iraq. We are the foundation of
the new national station. We would like to create free
Iraqi radio and tv stations and that's where we're
heading," says Ahmad al Rikaby, Radio Iraq's director of
news. Prior to this job, he was the London bureau chief
at Radio Free Iraq, a US-funded operation."
We have not been able to find evidence that he has any
particular qualifications or experience in post-war
civilian reconstruction, socio-political and economic
development, nation-building or reconciliation.
MICHAEL
MOBBS
Civil co-ordinator
for ORHA and senior policy adviser to Douglas Feith
A hawk with old relations to Richard Perle and
supporter of the concept of "enemy
combattants"
An international lawyer and recent legal adviser to
the Pentagon, Michael Mobbs is to take charge of 11 of 23
ministries. Michael
Mobbs' special qualities are described here by the
Sidney Morning Herald:
"Mr Mobbs's appointment will also be viewed
as controversial. He came to prominence in Washington
for his legal arguments to a US court that an American
citizen captured in Afghanistan should be deemed an
"enemy combatant" and denied any legal rights in the
US."
During the Reagan administration, Mobbs worked for the
US Arms Control and Disarmament Agency and was close to
Richard Perle when he was assistant Secretary of Defence.
From January 1982 until December 1985, Mr. Mobbs served
as the Secretary of Defense Representative to the
Strategic Arms Reduction Talks for Caspar Weinberger and
Assistant Secretary Richard Perle. In December 1985,
President Reagan appointed Mr. Mobbs as Assistant
Director (Strategic Programs) of the U.S. Arms Control
and Disarmament Agency, following Senate confirmation. In
that position, Mr. Mobbs dealt with ballistic missile
defense (BMD) research, development and testing matters,
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty issues and
intermediate-range nuclear force negotiations, as well as
strategic arms negotiations with the Soviet Union.
Mobbs later joined a law firm in which Douglas Feith
[see below] - now under-secretary for policy at
the Pentagon - was a partner. He was also author of what
has become known as the "Mobbs declaration", a document
presented to the US courts on behalf of the Pentagon
claiming that the US president has wide powers to detain
American citizens alleged to be enemy combatants
indefinitely - all according to Brian
Whitaker of The Guardian.
Here is how the Washington Post reports Mobbs'
role in the Hamdi case:
The government can jail a U.S. citizen
captured overseas indefinitely when the military
declares him an "enemy combatant," a federal appeals
court said yesterday, ruling that a Louisiana-born man
has been held properly in a Navy brig without a lawyer
or other constitutional rights. To justify its
detention of Hamdi, the government issued a two-page
declaration of facts signed by Defense Department
Special Adviser Michael Mobbs.
Says National
Journal about Mobbs:
If there is one name behind the Bush
administration's controversial suspension of judicial
rights in the war on terrorism, it belongs to Mobbs.
Although Attorney General John D. Ashcroft has been
the most vocal defender of that policy, it was the
Defense Department that insisted on a wartime standard
of justice for the 660 men detained at a U.S. base in
Cuba and for two American citizens held incommunicado
in the United States. And when the government needed
to justify the detention of one of those men, it
issued a nine-paragraph statement signed by Mobbs,
then a legal consultant at the Pentagon. The
declaration did not specify what Yasser Esam Hamdi had
allegedly done. "Due process requires something other
than a basic assertion by someone named Mobbs," said
the judge, before rejecting what he called "The Mobbs
Declaration.
We have not been able to find evidence that he has any
particular qualifications or experience in post-war
civilian reconstruction, socio-political and economic
development, nation-building or reconciliation.
PHILLIP
CARROLL
Adviser to the
Iraqi Oil Ministry
Corporate player in Texas, Cheney-connected, former
Shell Oil America and Fluor, working also in
Afghanistan
Presumed to be or become another deputy to Jay Garner.
He certainly has expertise in the petroleum business. But
he also has more
than a few ties to the White House, the Sydney
Morning Herald reports, and to the companies in line
to profit from the reconstruction mission.
"The former head of Shell Oil's US arm, Peter
Carroll, has been tipped as Garner's advisor to
oversee the oil industry, with an Iraqi exile
economist as his number two. While few question
Carroll's long expertise in the industry, having a
Texas oilman working with the technocrats from the
nationalised Iraqi oil company will be a challenge.
Carroll was a major corporate player in Texas,
serving on the business lobby group the Greater
Houston Partnership, whose members were big energy and
construction firms. Among them was Halliburton, the
company run by Vice- President Dick Cheney. When
Carroll left Shell America in 1996 he went to run the
giant energy construction company Fluor until last
year. Fluor has been invited to bid on reconstruction
work in Iraq."
On May 4, it was announced that Carroll
will head the advisory board to former Iraqi oil
ministry official, Thamir
Abbas Ghadhban, who has been appointed by the US to
run the country''s oil industry and used to be director
of planning at the oil ministry before the war. The
comment of The
Boston Globe is worth quoting:
With protests continuing in Iraqi streets
over American control of the nation's affairs, US
officials strived for a degree of fanfare despite
having little in the way of major news. The officials
are trying to include more Iraqis, even former Ba'ath
Party members, in the new government, although the
appointees' actual powers and portfolios remain ill
defined.
Both Fluor
and Shell have aroused controversy in the past. Fluor
is a Fortune 500 company with a backlog of global
contracts totaling $10.6 billion. Along with two other
companies, Fluor has contracts for as much as $100
million from the Army Corps of Engineers for work in
Afghanistan.
We have not been able to find evidence that he has any
particular qualifications or experience in post-war
civilian reconstruction, socio-political and economic
development, nation-building or reconciliation.
DAN
AMSTUTZ
Reconstruction of
Iraq's agriculture and/or "financial coordinator" for
ORHA and "principal financial and economic policy
adviser" to Garner.
Former government official, with Washington consulting
firms, the world's largest grain exporter, like
appointing Saddam to chair a human rights
commission...
This man got a bad start in Iraq. Here is Washington
Post's report:
On April 21, Agriculture Secretary Ann M.
Veneman announced she was appointing a prominent
agribusiness executive to "lead the U.S. government's
agriculture reconstruction efforts in Iraq" and serve
as her personal liaison with American military
officials there. Her appointee, Dan Amstutz, flew to
Kuwait, where he detailed his hopes for Iraq in an
upbeat teleconference with reporters last Thursday.
But his new status came as news to the Pentagon-led
team in the Iraqi capital. An official at the
Baghdad-based U.S. Office of Reconstruction and
Humanitarian Assistance (ORHA) said late last week
that Lee Schatz, a USDA employee, was in charge of the
office's agriculture portfolio, and he referred
questions about Amstutz's role to Veneman's
department.
Amstutz,
one of several former government officials who have set
up Washington consulting firms, will join other
government representatives in the region immediately,
Veneman said. He served as undersecretary for
international affairs and commodity programs from 1983 to
1987 and then as ambassador and chief negotiator for
agriculture during the Uruguay Round General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade (GATT) talks in 1987-1989. He has held
positions with Cargill; Goldman, Sachs & Co.; the
International Wheat Council and North American Export
Grain Association.
Mike
Caulton's review of Amstutz in Sydney Morning
Herald of this man is sobering:
Amstutz's "background and experience" is as a
senior executive of the Cargill Corporation, the
biggest grain exporter in the world, and president of
the North American Grain Export Association. He is in
Baghdad to flog American wheat, not ours.
"Putting Dan Amstutz in charge of agricultural
reconstruction in Iraq is like putting Saddam Hussein
in the chair of a human rights commission," said
Oxfam, the British aid agency this week. "This guy is
uniquely well placed to advance the commercial
interests of American grain companies and bust open
the Iraqi market, but singularly ill equipped to lead
a reconstruction effort in a developing country." You
get the picture.
Reuters
ran this report on Oxfam's blasting of Amstutz'
appointment. The Guardian added that President George W.
Bush was on record as saying he wanted American farmers
to feed the world. And a US Undersecretary for Farm and
Foreign Service has made it clear that "Our
longer-term objectives [inIraq] of course are
to develop a market-oriented economy, to have a very
vibrant private sector, to have a competitive economy,
one that is market-driven."
Here is what Amstutz
said in a recent briefing about the transition to a
market economy:
"Now as far as what I consider the next step,
the beginning of this transition to a market economy,
and the revitalization and the restructuring of Iraq's
agriculture, it's of key importance that the leaders
of the ministry of agriculture, the ministry of
irrigation, and the ministry of trade are selected so
that we can begin a dialogue with them, and I can tell
you that this is an ongoing process as we talk. Our
agriculture guy up there, Lee Shatz, is working on the
ministry of agriculture complement and others are
working on the ministry of irrigation. Some of that,
incidentally, is spearheaded by the Corps of
Engineers, and the ministry of trade is being worked
on by State Department people."
Great entreneurship, indeed. As in all statements
coming out of US officials, there is no mention of any
consultation with the Iraqis about the direction the
changes should take. The US produced a "restructuring of
Iraq's agricultura" before any Iraqi is
"selected." And it doesn't seem to strike anyone
as odd that he is saying just second later:
"That this is Iraq's country, the country is
the Iraqis, and we want to facilitate the development
as they view it. I'm hopeful that we'll have leaders
of vision and ambition, that occupy these jobs in
these ministries, and that we'll have exciting
planning sessions in the weeks ahead."
Development as the Iraqis see it?
LEE
SCHATZ
Reconstruction of
Iraq's agriculture
He is deputy director of the Livestock, Dairy and
Poultry division of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
Foreign Agricultural Service. What he seems to be most
known for is that he was agricultural attache at the US
embassy in Teheran and one
of the six in hiding at the Canadian embassy,
"exfiltrated" by CIA in January 1980. The operational
involvement of GAD officers in the exfiltration from Iran
of six US State Department personnel on 28 January 1980
was a closely held secret until the CIA decided to reveal
it as part of the Agency's 50th anniversary celebrations
in 1997.
ROBIN
RAPHEL
In charge of Iraq's
trade
CIA and USAID background, Iran, Israel, helping the
UNOCAL company and supporting the Taliban in
Afghanistan...
Here
is her official biography
Robin Lynn Raphel, a career Foreign Service
Officer, became United States Ambassador to the
Republic of Tunisia in November 1997.
Ambassador Raphel served as Assistant Secretary of
State for South Asian Affairs 1993-1997. She began her
career as a lecturer in history at Damavand College in
Tehran, Iran. She first worked for the United States
Government as an economic analyst for the CIA from
1973 to 1975. She then moved to Islamabad, Pakistan
where she worked for the U.S. Agency for International
Development as an economic/financial analyst. She then
joined the State Department.
Upon her return to Washington, DC in 1978, Ambassador
Raphel worked in the Office of Investment Affairs in
the Economic and Business Bureau; on the Israel Desk;
Staff Aide for the Assistant Secretary for the Near
East and South Asian Affairs Bureau; and as Special
Assistant to the Under Secretary for Political
Affairs. In 1984 she was assigned to the U.S. Embassy
in London where she covered Middle East, South Asia
and East Asia, and Africa. She served as Counselor for
Political Affairs at the U.S. Embassy in Pretoria
(1988-1991), and at the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi
(1991-1993). In August 1993, she was named the first
Assistant Secretary of State for South Asian
Affairs.
Ambassador Raphel received a B.A. in history and
economics from the University of Washington. She
pursued graduate studies in history at Cambridge
University and earned an M.A. in economics from the
University of Maryland. Her foreign languages are
French and Urdu.
In this case the references are CIA and USAID coupled
with experience from Iran, Pakistan and Israel. She is
currently senior vice president at the National
Defense University in Washington.
The former US State Department official Robin Raphel
used
to hold meetings with the Talibans from 1996 to 1998
and then no objection was raised to their treatment of
women and so-called human rights. Journalist Ahmed Rashid
in his Taliban: Islam, Oil and the New Great Game
in Central Asia, has documented how the US came close to
recognising the Taliban; how
serving US officers, including assistant secretary of
state Robin Raphel, helped Unocal; how the oil majors
drafted a galaxy of Americans, including Henry Kissinger,
Alexander Haig, former US ambassador Robert Oakley, and
Richard Armitage, currently deputy secretary of state.
This is also the viewpoint
of Bin Laden's biographer, Hamid Mir, who has this to say
about Mullah Omar's perception of the US:
"Mullah Omar is convinced that America is not
after Osama, they are after Islam. Omar told me a year
back that Osama came to Afghanistan in May 1996,
Taliban captured Kabul in September 1996 and American
Assistant Secretary Of State Mrs. Robin Raphel
supported Taliban in November 1996. She was silent on
Osama because America wanted to use Taliban against
China and Iran, when Taliban refused, Americans
created the issue of Osama bin laden."
Official
US policy on Afghanistan was best summed up by then
US assistant Secretary of State for South Asia Robin
Raphel when, upon the Taliban's capture of the Afghan
capital in the fall of 1996, she "urged all states to
engage with the Taliban and not isolate them." The
Progressive
Asian writes that the Taliban has not always been
seen as a US enemy and its capture of power in
Afghanistan was seen by US oil interests as "very
positive" (Christoper Taggart, VP of Unocal).
Originally, a policy of "engagement" was attempted with
high level officials such as Robin Raphel holding high
level meetings with the Taliban in Khandahar to smooth
the passage for US oil interests. These
negotiations eventually failed leading to a breakdown of
relations between the Taliban and the US
governments. Unocal pushed out its rival. The deal
was: Washington would recognise the Taliban, which would
favour Unocal over Bridas. (The deal fell through -
because of instability.)
TIMOTHY
CARNEY
In charge of Iraq's
industry
Not that popular in Haiti and a role in Phnom Penh,
Cambodia 30 years ago
Carney is former US ambassador to Sudan and Haiti and
stationed in Phnom Penh in 1972 and later in
Thailand.
Haiti
Progrès painted a very negative portrait of
Carney in December 1999:
Some also question Carney's ties to the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). In 1972, he became
the Political Officer at the Embassy in Phnom Penh,
Cambodia, a post which is usually reserved for the CIA
station chief. His appointment came at the height of
the 1970-1975 bombing of Cambodia, when the U.S. was
working feverishly to prop up their puppet, the
dictator Lon Nol. Carney was also the "political
officer" in Bangkok, Thailand from 1980-83. In 1992,
he was named director of Asian affairs at the National
Security Council, a post usually reserved for those
with some intelligence background. Thus in Haiti, one
has to wonder whether Carney wasn't working with the
CIA to undermine Clinton's tactics of advancing U.S.
interests.
Carney's tenure in Haiti, which began in January
1997, was not auspicious. He was reputed to have made
deprecating remarks about the country in private. Even
in public statements, he was often less than
diplomatic. For example, in the summer of 1998, when
Haitians protested U.S. claims to Haiti's Ile de
Navase (Navassa), a small off-shore island, Carney
quipped that Haitians "have more important things to
worry about, such as choosing a prime minister." Prime
Minister Rosny Smarth had resigned in June 1997 and
was not yet replaced due to political wrangling.
Although diplomats are not supposed to opine on the
internal affairs of host countries, Carney often
lectured Haitians on their country's political
turmoil.
As adviser to the Haiti
Democracy Project, he has stated recently that "The
big question is whether Aristide is going to understand
that he has no future," said Timothy Carney, a former
U.S. ambassador to Haiti. "Without massive reform, Haiti
is once again headed for kind of chaos that has
intermittently dogged its history."
On the website of Benador
Associates, a PR and media bureau that is prides
itself of having some of the most hawkish American people
as experts, Carney
writes about how the Clinton administration missed an
opportunity to catch Bin Laden when the Sudanese
government opened a window of opportunity. Here is a
VOA
report, a Washington
Post story and an ArabReview
report on that.
The New York Times, citing unidentified administration
officials, reported on May 12 that Carney
may soon leave.
DAVID J.
DUNFORD
Holds the foreign
affairs portfolio in Iraq
Experienced diplomat with assignments in the region,
involved in Middle Eastern Bank, political scientist and
businessman with defence and other
industries
Here is a
biography from his university. Adjunct lecturer at
the University of Arizona's Dept of Political Science,
retired from the U.S. Foreign Service in June of 1995
following completion of his assignment as Ambassador to
the Sultanate of Oman. He has served also in Saudi Arabia
and Egypt. Ambassador Dunford teaches courses on the
Arab-Israeli Conflict, Globalization and Global
Governance, and the Business Environment in the Middle
East and North Africa.During 1997-98, he was Coordinator
of the Transition Team for the establishment of the Bank
for Economic Cooperation and Development in the Middle
East and North Africa (MENABANK).
He also does some international business consulting.
Consulting clients include or have included two major
U.S. oil companies, two major U.S. defense contractors, a
major U.S. telecommunications company, a well-known
policy research institution and a Wisconsin university.
Again, a connection to business and defence
contractors.
Ambassador Dunford views on the world and the role of
the US - quite balanced compared with most of his
American colleagues, can be found at the High
Desert Forum. He seems rather critical of Ariel
Sharon and, to some extent, also of President Bush and
appears to be aware of some historical root causes
underlying terrorism. However, he is extremely concerned
about the oil...
"He then went on to stress the importance of
appreciating the role of oil supplies to understand
the politics related to the Middle East. In this
regard he also addressed the events of September 11th
and what it meant to US interests and
counter-terrorism measures...At the same time he noted
that if there were ever an alliance between oil
producing nations in central Asia and the Middle East
it could create a serious situation for the United
States... Even if we capture Osama bin Laden, Dunford
said many challenges would remain. In his
opinion two of the main problems came from ignorance
about this area of the world and the importance of
oil.
The New York Times, citing unidentified administration
officials, reported on May 12 that Dunford
may soon leave.
WALTER B.
SLOCOMBE
Oversees the Iraqi
defence industry, armed forces and related matters
From Pentagon with hawkish views, Star War enthusiast,
Wolfowitz "Democratic hawk" and in favour of attacking
Iraq...
Walter B. Slocombe is a former Under Secretary of
Defense (Policy). Her is an
official biography; Walter B. Slocombe was nominated
by President Clinton on 13 July 1994 to be undersecretary
of defense for policy and was confirmed by the Senate on
14 September 1994. Prior to this appointment, he served
as principal deputy undersecretary of defense for policy
since 1 June 1993. Pending his confirmation, he had been
a consultant to the Office of the Undersecretary of
Defense for Policy from 21 January 1993. From 1986 to
1993, Mr Slocombe served as a consultant to RAND and the
Strategic Air Command Technical Advisory Committee, as a
member of the advisory panel for the Office of Technology
Assessment studies of strategic command and control, and
as chairman of its study of the defense industrial base.
He was a member of the advisory councils of the Center
for Strategic and International Studies, the Woodrow
Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at
Princeton University, the National Security Archive, the
Center for Naval Analyses Strategy and Forces Division,
MIT?s Lincoln National Laboratory, and the Center for
National Security Studies at the Los Alamos National
Laboratory. Mr Slocombe was also on the board of
directors of the United States Committee for the
International Institute for Strategic Studies. From
January 1981 until he joined the Clinton administration,
he was a member of the Washington, D.C., law firm of
Caplin and Drysdale. He had previously served as deputy
undersecretary of defense for policy planning from
November 1979 to January 1981 and as principal deputy
assistant secretary of defense for international security
affairs from January 1977 to November 1979. In both
positions, he served concurrently as director of the
Department of Defense?s SALT Task Force. From 1970 to
1971, he was a research associate at the International
Institute for Strategic Studies in London. In 1969 and
1970, Mr Slocombe was a member of the Program Analysis
Office of the National Security Council staff, working on
strategic arms control, long-term security policy
planning, and intelligence issues.
Here is the bio at the website of Caplin
and Drysdale Attorneys.
It is easy to see that he has been engaged inalmost
all the right-wing, hawkish institution related to
security affairs. It xomes as no surprise that he is a
staunch
supporter of the Ballistic Missile Defence against
the rogue nation threat. He is Slocombe's
views about Iraq and the justification for attacking
it:
"Central problem that Iraq presents to the
world is Saddam Hussein's contiuing campaign to
develop chemical., biological and nuclear weapons and
means of delivering them ever more effectively and
over longer ranges.
These program are unequivocal violations of Iraq's
obligations under international law, and in particular
of any number of UN Security Council
resolutions. Their continuation is the
justification for use of military force against Saddam
Hussein and his WMD programs if he continues to refuse
to abide by UN mandates ..."
And here are his
remarks before the Senate on Iraq.
Washington Post writes that Walter B. Slocombe, who
held Feith's job [see above] in the Clinton
administration, will oversee the transition of the Iraqi
defense ministry. Although a Democrat, he has maintained
good relations with Wolfowitz and is described by some as
a "Democratic hawk."
MARGARET
TUTWEILER
In charge of
communication
But did not seem to communicate...
Here is Margaret
Tutweiler's official bio. During President George
H.W. Bush's Administration Ms. Tutwiler served as
Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs and State
Department Spokesman from 1989 to 1992, later ambassador
to Morocco. She was supposed to be in charge of
communications, but repeatedly refused to meet the media
in Baghdad. Tutweiler left by mid-May.
CLINT
WILLIAMSON
Senior adviser to
the Ministry of Justice
High-level past in the Hague Tribunal, staunchly
biased against Serbia, also former director of Justice in
Kosovo. Helped the US by declaring that the Croatian
offensive was a minor incident...
Clint Williamson is a National Security Council staff
member assigned to the Justice Ministry. He has served
seven years at the International War Crimes Tribunal,
ICTY, in The Hague and is former director of the
Department of Justice, UNMIK, Kosovo.
The
Observer of July 1, 2001, writes that "In January
1999 as a hurricane of violence swept across Kosovo, the
West - after eight bloody years of Balkan wars - finally
decided that Milosevic should face its wrath. In The
Hague, Paterson - a key tribunal lawyer - and colleague
Clint Williamson were put in charge of harvesting
evidence against him."
Willimason, in his role as Deputy Chief Prosecutor of
ICTY, advanced his
view in 1996 that Yugoslavia (FRY) was a "criminal
state." One analysis, by TFF Associate Michel
Chossudovsky, describes Williamson's role in ICTY in this
manner:
"Several Tribunal officials including
American Lawyer Clint Williamson sought to discredit
the Canadian Peacekeeping officers' testimony who
witnessed the Krajina massacres in 1995. Williamson,
who described the shelling of Knin as a "minor
incident," said that the Pentagon had told him that
Knin was a legitimate military target... The
[Tribunal's] review concluded by voting not to
include the shelling of Knin in any indictment, a
conclusion that stunned and angered many at the
tribunal".."
That Pentagon was involved in the Croatian Army's
Operations Flash and Storm is a public secret.
Incidentally, it happened at the time when Peter
Galbraith was US Ambassador to Croatia. Galbraith was
recently seen in Baghdad; he is professor of National
Security Studies at the National War College.
Dr
Galbraith serves on the board of Indict, the human
rights group supported by the Iraqi exile movement in
London. Their work has been used extensively by the US
President, George Bush, the British Prime Minister, Tony
Blair, and John Howard, to make the case against Saddam.
He is also on the Advisory Board of the Committee
for the Liberation of Iraq.
Ambassador Galbraith
uncovered and documented Saddam Hussein's genocidal
campaign against the Iraqi Kurds in the late 1980's,
leading to sanctions legislation against Iraq and later
contributing to the decision to create a safe-haven for
the Kurds.
Williamson intends is considering the
establishment of a court system in Iraq to try those
responsible for crimes against the Iraqi people. "In all
probability we will see some sort of special chamber set
up within the Iraqi system composed of Iraqi judges using
Iraqi prosecutors who will handle this," said Clint
Williamson, the office's adviser to the Iraqi Ministry of
Justice. "But it will be a special chamber, not just
going into the normal criminal courts." Why a special
chamber if it is to be run by Iraqis?
JAMES
WOOLSEY
Mentioned in
relation to the Iraqi Ministry of Information
Former CIA director, believes we are approaching World
War IV, Israel lobby, well-connected hawk,
Here is what Time
wrote on April 6:
"Two weeks ago Powell sent Rumsfeld a list of
prominent Americans who could help the hand-off from
the military to the interim authority, but most were
rejected as woolly-headed by the Defense Department.
Instead, Rumsfeld nominated a notably more hard-line
group, including a former CIA director, James Woolsey,
to be Minister of Information."
David
Corn of The Nation comments:
"On April 2, Woolsey made headlines by
telling students at UCLA that the Iraq war was part of
"World War IV." Speaking at a teach-in sponsored by
campus Republicans and Americans for Victory Over
Terrorism, a pro-war-in-Iraq group founded by William
Bennett, Woolsey remarked, "This fourth world war, I
think, will last considerably longer than either World
Wars I or II did for us. Hopefully not the full
four-plus decades of the Cold War." He cited three
enemies: the religious leaders of Iran, the "fascists"
of Syria and Iraq, and Islamic extremists like Osama
bin Laden and al Qaeda."
And what's next? Ken Lay to head up the new Iraqi
energy ministry? Trent Lott, the cultural ministry?
Richard Perle, the new Iraqi ambassador to the United
Nations?"
"A postwar job for Woolsey the Would-be Conqueror
would be unnecessarily provocative. During the
occupation, the United States should conduct itself
with humility and sensitivity (especially since it
seems, once again, to be shoving the United Nations
aside). These are not qualities for which the Pentagon
is renowned. To many within Iraq and elsewhere, the
message conveyed by any Woolsey appointment will be,
Washington has sent the CIA to take over Iraq. So why
do it? Does Woolsey alone possess the needed skill
set? (Which American will be in charge of the new
Iraqi intelligence agency?) But credit the Pentagon
with loyalty, for it appears to be sticking with one
of the most prominent cheerleaders for war in Iraq
(and perhaps beyond) and standing by a grand tradition
of war. To the victor go the spoils. In this case, no
matter how ridiculous or counterproductive that may
be."
Woolsey serves on the advisory board of the JINSA,
Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs with
which Jay Garner is also associated and on the Defense
Policy Board. Furthermore, writes Zvi
Bar'el of Ha'aretz on April 10, 2003:
Woolsey is an enthusiastic supporter of
Chalabi, and a loyal follower of Donald Rumsfeld and
Paul Wolfowitz. He was a member of the committee that
was established in 1998 by Congress to examine the
strategic threat against the United States. The
committee included Wolfowitz and Jay Garner, who will
be the governor general of Iraq. The committee was
headed by Rumsfeld, and already then he indicated the
axis of evil, composed of Iran, Iraq and North Korea.
Woolsey has another good "quality." He is the vice
president for security consultation with a U.S.
consulting firm that in 2002 held contracts with the
U.S. administration worth about $700 million. He is
also a member of the consulting committee of the
Committee for the Liberation of Iraq, headed by Bruce
Jackson, former vice president of Lockheed Martin, one
of the giant defense contractors in the United
States.
The recruitment for Iraq indeed takes place within
small and narrow circles...
His CV from National Commission on Terrorism tells
that he is a partner at the law firm of Shea
& Gardner. More of Woolsey's worldview from a
2003 lecture at Yale here.
We have not been able to find evidence that he has any
particular qualifications or experience in post-war
civilian reconstruction, socio-political and economic
development, nation-building or reconciliation.
© TFF 2003
Tell a friend about this article
Send to:
From:
Message and your name
You are welcome to
reprint, copy, archive, quote or re-post this item, but
please retain the source.
Would
you - or a friend - like to receive TFF PressInfo by
email?
|