Daily Kos

The PNAC Paper Trail

Tue May 02, 2006 at 09:46:56 AM PDT

The longer the fiasco in Iraq drags on, the more we hear the folks who cooked up the idea of invading that sand dune republic denying that they had anything to do with it.  Crooks and Liars provided this John Bolton quote from a press conference televised last week on CNN.
We did not violate the UN charter in the war to overthrow Saddam Hussein and that plan was not drawn...at the Project for the New American Century.

John's memory must be slipping, what with all those responsibilities he has as Ambassador to the United Nations now.  Maybe it's time to help him refresh it.

Under the fold: a stroll down Selective Memory Lane...

Let's take a hike down the PNAC Paper Trail.

June 3, 1997: PNAC issues its Statement of Principles.  "American foreign and defense policy is adrift," it states at the beginning, and goes on to criticize the Clinton administration.  This document contains no specific mention of Iraq, but does admonish that, "America has a vital role in maintaining peace and security in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East," and that "we need to increase defense spending significantly if we are to carry out our global responsibilities today and modernize our armed forces for the future[.]"

Among the signatories are Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld and Paul Wolfowitz, as well as PNAC co-founders Bill Kristol and Robert Kagan.  

January 19, 1998: John Bolton publishes "Congress Versus Iraq" in Bill Kristol's Weekly Standard.  He slams President Clinton for being soft on Iraq, and exhorts Congress to force Clinton into taking more aggressive action against Saddam Hussein.  

January 26, 1998: PNAC sends a letter to President Clinton urging military action to remove the Saddam Hussein regime from power.  A key passage states that if America continues its containment policy, "...the safety of American troops in the region, of our friends and allies like Israel and the moderate Arab states, and a significant portion of the world's supply of oil will all be put at hazard."

Keep that in mind the next time young Mister Bush says invading Iraq wasn't about Israel or oil.  (Please note that I have no problem with America keeping Israel under its protective umbrella.  But we didn't need to invade Iraq to do it.)

And, oh, one of the signatures on that letter belongs to a guy named John Bolton.  

A copy of the letter appears in the Washington Post on January 27.  

January 30, 1998: PNAC founders Bill Kristol and Robert Kagan publish "Bombing is not Enough" in the New York Times.  "Saddam Hussein must go," it says.  "If Mr. Clinton is serious about protecting us and our allies from Iraqi biological and chemical weapons, he will order ground forces to the gulf. Four heavy divisions and two airborne divisions are available for deployment. The President should act, and Congress should support him in the only policy that can succeed."  

There's no question: PNAC was specifically calling for an armed invasion of Iraq by ground forces.  How many teams of lawyers do they need to talk their way around that?

February 2, 1998: Robert Kagan publishes "Saddam's Impending Victory" in Bill Kristol's Weekly Standard.  Kagan again calls for removal of Hussein by force and compares him to Hitler.  

February 26, 1998: Kristol and Kagan publish "A 'Great Victory' for Iraq" in the Washington Post.  "Unless we are willing to live in a world where everyone has to 'do business' with Saddam and his weapons of mass destruction, we need to be willing to use U.S. air power and ground troops to get rid of him."

March 9, 1998: Bolton publishes "Kofi Hour" in the Weekly Standard and criticizes the Clinton administration for working through the UN to deal with Hussein.

September 18, 1998: PNAC's Paul Wolfowitz testifies before the House National Security Committee on Iraq during which he condemns the Clinton's Iraq policy.  "The Clinton Administration repeatedly makes excuses for its own weakness..."

September 28, 1998: Robert Kagan's "A Way to Oust Saddam" appears in the Weekly Standard.  "It has long been clear that the only way to rid the world of Saddam's weapons of mass destruction is to rid Iraq of Saddam."

November 16, 1998:  An non-attributed editorial in the Weekly Standard titled "How to Attack Iraq" says, "It now seems fairly certain that some time in the next few weeks the Clinton administration will have to strike Iraq. There really are no acceptable alternatives."

January 4, 1999: Robert Kagan's "Saddam Wins-Again" appears in the Weekly Standard.  More castigation of UN and Clinton administration efforts to contain Saddam Hussein.

Skip Ahead

There's much more.  You can read the entire PNAC literature on Iraq at the group's website, starting here.  

But let's take a close look at two key PNAC documents from the 21st century.  

Rebuilding America's Defenses was published in September 2000, just before the presidential election that brought George W. Bush into power.  This neoconservative manifesto revealed that the PNAC's ambitions in the Middle East were only obliquely related to Saddam Hussein.

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.  (Page 14.)

In other words, Hussein was merely the convenient excuse for establishing permanent military bases in the heart of the Middle East and controlling the flow of the region's oil.  

But the PNACers realized that the road to achieving their dream of a global American empire was "...likely to be a long one, absent some catastrophic and catalyzing event--like a new Pearl Harbor."  (Page 51.)

On September 11, 2001 PNAC got its Pearl Harbor, and a significant portion of its membership held key policy making posts in the Bush administration, some of the most notable among them being Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, and Bolton.  

On September 20, nine days after the 9/11 attacks, PNAC wrote a letter to Mister Bush that said, "...even if evidence does not link Iraq directly to the attack, any strategy aiming at the eradication of terrorism and its sponsors must include a determined effort to remove Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq."

#

DNA evidence couldn't provide better proof that the PNAC formulated the Bush administration's Iraq policy than the paper trail the PNAC itself provides.  For Bolton to deny that the PNAC "planned" the Iraq invasion goes beyond irony, beyond the absurd, beyond the Orwellian.  

There's a temptation to shrug one's shoulders and say, "Why dwell on this?  It's in the past."

But it's not in the past.  We're living with the neoconservative nightmare today and there's no telling how long it will take to undo their damage, partly because they're still in power and they're still doing damage.  

#

Commander Jeff Huber, U.S. Navy (Retired) writes from Virginia Beach, Virginia.  Read his weekday commentaries at ePluribus Media and Pen and Sword.

Tags: John Bolton, Iraq, PNAC, Bill Kristol (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 24 comments

  •  PNAC is such an unknown among the people (3+ / 0-)

    When I worked as a peon with the Kerry campaign I often mentioned the PNAC and no one knew anything about this think tank and often doubted my story. I also don't think the average person on the street know what a neoconservative is.

    Isn't odd that Senator Danforth has written several op-ed's and given speeches about the religious right's negative influences on the Republican party but doesn't tell us about the negative influence of neoconservatives. When Bush Sr. was in the WH he called the group who supported this policy "crazies" and kept them "in the basement."  

    Then, I think it is  odd that I don't hear our Democratic senators and representatives attack neoconservatism as much as they do the stands taken by the religious right. For sure, all Americans need to know who these neoconservatives are and their objectives.

  •  Thank you for the compelling evidence. (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    paige, subtropolis, hypersphere01

    Hussein was merely the convenient excuse for establishing permanent military bases in the heart of the Middle East and controlling the flow of the region's oil.

    Here's a couple of snips that offer details of how this is being done.

    *BALAD AIR BASE*, Iraq - The concrete goes on forever, vanishing into the noonday glare, 2 million cubic feet of it, a mile-long slab that's now the home of up to 120 U.S. helicopters, a "heli-park" as good as any back in the States.

    At another giant base, al-Asad in Iraq's western desert, the 17,000 troops and workers come and go in a kind of bustling American town, with a Burger King, Pizza Hut and a car dealership, stop signs, traffic regulations and young bikers clogging the roads.

    At a third hub down south, Tallil, they're planning a new mess hall, one that will seat 6,000 hungry airmen and soldiers for chow. ABC News

    The fortress-like compound rising beside the Tigris River here will be the largest of its kind in the world, the size of Vatican City, with the population of a small town, its own defense force, self-contained power and water, and a precarious perch at the heart of Iraq's turbulent future.

    The new U.S. Embassy also seems as cloaked in secrecy as the ministate in Rome. Link

    "This chamber reeks of blood." -- Sen George McGovern, 1970

    by cotterperson on Tue May 02, 2006 at 10:07:47 AM PDT

    •  Yeah... (2+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      cotterperson

      ...it's all part of the plan.  

      Thanks for reading and posting.

      Best,

      Jeff

    •  Really think were leaving anytime soon? (0+ / 0-)

      Were building a gulag on the Tigris. Biggest US Embassy in the world. In a country where everyone now hates us.

      The pure hubristic stupidity of this group continues to astound me. I sure hope we take back the House this election cycle and can start throwing out some trash.

      "In the end we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends." MLK, changed to this during the 2008 FISA fight

      by bewert on Tue May 02, 2006 at 10:45:07 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  Nice summary. n/t (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Cho

    I am an anti-imperialist. I am opposed to having the eagle put its talons on any other land. -- Mark Twain

    by Meteor Blades on Tue May 02, 2006 at 10:22:04 AM PDT

  •  Following links one night about PNAC (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    subtropolis, Halcyon, fiddlingnero

    I came upon a site that had maps of countries with major oil reserves, with an overlay map that identified all the PNAC identified "unstable" countries, and the satellite countries around those.  The ones that need Democracy forced upon them at the point of a bomb, if black ops can't acomplish the goal.

    Being my pre-kos days, I did not think to bookmark the link. I have since searched for it, and cannot find. I couldn't even find the origional map on the PNAC site, and so thought it had been scrubbed.

    John and Jane Merkin don't know what PNAC is, never heard of it. Look at me like I have pointed conspiracy ears when I try to explain. It is not an easy thing to explain. So old and vast.

    Thanks for putting it in such clear and cronological sequence. This is a good piece to e-mail. If John and Jane were interested enough to give me their address, and actually read something....

    Hands off my Social Security, John McCain.

    by emmasnacker on Tue May 02, 2006 at 10:32:32 AM PDT

    •  Find OIL MAPS HERE: (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      subtropolis

      http://www.judicialwatch.org/...

      Judicial Watch, the public interest group that investigates and prosecutes government corruption and abuse, said today that documents turned over by the Commerce Department, under court order as a result of Judicial Watch’s Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit concerning the activities of the Cheney Energy Task Force, contain a map of Iraqi oilfields, pipelines, refineries and terminals, as well as 2 charts detailing Iraqi oil and gas projects, and “Foreign Suitors for Iraqi Oilfield Contracts.”

      •  Thanks (0+ / 0-)

        The maps I saw were world maps. Overlayed with PNAC watchlist maps.

        Hands off my Social Security, John McCain.

        by emmasnacker on Tue May 02, 2006 at 11:04:47 AM PDT

        [ Parent ]

        •  I too, live in a rural, undereducated area and (0+ / 0-)

          try to figure out a way to 'break the news' about what's really going on in the world. I have a huge file of articles I keep thinking I'll print out and pass around, thinking, 'If only they read these they'll wake up and smell the coffee.' But I don't want to be shunned or cut off from my neighbors, which I fear would happen. My farm is next door to a fundamentalist church (although I'm not sure if they are co-opted or not, they're Brethren) so I'm especially sensitive to how they might perceive me, since, to them, I'll always be an outsider. I think about informing them for the purpose of planning our survival community as things go from bad to worse, so they won't be caught by surprise and we can all work together. I'm about the only one who could survive off the grid , and I'd rather be seen as someone who can help, rather than as someone from whom to steal the last jar of green beans.

          Kagro X's diary today gives an angle to try. They've heard of Watergate, and Iran-Contra, even if they don't realize their full significance. The pattern that Kagro draws, coupled with the obvious repeat pattern that is being replayed wrt Iran's 'gathering threat' may be a way to show the neighbors, without sounding too far out, that these are the same actors doing the same dance. Articles like the ones from the Boston Globe and Chicago Tribune , respectable MSM papers should help allay 'tinfoil' accusations.

          Jeff, I've included this in my document file, since it's a nice concise 'smoking gun.' Of course my neighbors will think all those 'links' would be good fried up with their breakfast eggs!

    •  is this it? (0+ / 0-)

      "They're telling us something we don't understand"
      General Charles de Gaulle, Mai '68

      by subtropolis on Tue May 02, 2006 at 11:31:52 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  No, but that's a nice one! (0+ / 0-)

        It was a for real PNAC map, on their site. Focus on mid east, and south america. "Unstable countries" were in one color, surrounded by "possibly unstable satelite" that "may need intervention". Some african countries too, gold there, so unstability would be good for the spread of Democracy.

        It was a second site that had done the overlays. I remember going back to the PNAC site and opening new winders so I could check to see if it was the same PNAC map as they claimed. Pre-firefox days, so it was not fun.

        I guess it doesn't really matter, we know what they are up to, and have been up to. It was a real eye opener for me at the time though. It made me read a lot more about the fuckers than I might have, had I not seen the map.  

        Hands off my Social Security, John McCain.

        by emmasnacker on Tue May 02, 2006 at 12:12:27 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

  •  Bill Kristol on Colbert last week (6+ / 0-)

    looked like he'd been bitch-slapped when Colbert asked him about PNAC.  "Its just a small group...Rumsfeld just signed a few letters..." Like the existence of PNAC, and its membership, was classified information.

    But the amazing thing is that, even with its website, even with the facts outlined by the diarist -- all of which are publicly known -- the press pays NO attention to the PNAC connection, even now.  It certainly didn't during the run-up to the war.

    "Mom, did you hurt yourself, or are you yelling at the TV again?

    by litigatormom on Tue May 02, 2006 at 10:34:54 AM PDT

  •  Original PNAC names kept 'dropping off' website! (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    subtropolis, Sanuk, Carbide Bit

    I first learned of PNAC in 1999.  When checking their site thru the years, it seemed quite "interesting" that names such as Bush Sr, Jeb Bush and even Bush Jr. = names that were DROPPED.

    What were these bozos afraid of?  Oh yeah, the TRUTH.

    All Americans need to read and understand the horror these crazies have unleashed.  N-O-W.

    HAD ENOUGH?

    Henry Kissinger once said, "Of all the despots I've had to deal with, none was more ruthless than Donald Rumsfeld."

  •  Bolton's (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Cho

    poor memory had better improve before January 2007.  

  •  Frontline Interview of Kristol (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    subtropolis

    The push to war on Iraq begins in 1991 in the BushI administration.

    http://www.pbs.org/...

    "The Program Behind Closed Doors" was the overall topic.

    The Frontline program: "Rumsfeld's War" is also excellent.

    Googling Buchanan PNAC results in some interesting links. Buchanan was in fact one of the very strong critics of the PNAC aganda and though strongly attacked as anti-Semitic, was one of the first to fight back strongly enough to make the accusation secondary to the points he was making. He authored two books, neither of which sold well but are thought provoking and very quick reads.

  •  Today's Juan Cole column (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    subtropolis

    discusses the neoconservatives' agenda.
    http://www.juancole.com/

    •  danke (0+ / 0-)

      … At what point would Iran be a greater military threat to the United States than Communist China? It certainly is not now. It is just a poor, small, ramshackle, mulla-ridden society with no unconventional weapons at all. Since the elections of 1997, Iran has had a lively reform movement and it is difficult to identify anything the Iranian state has done to the United States since then. Iranians mounted candle-light vigils for the US after 9/11, and President Mohammad Khatami spoke eloquently of his solidarity with the American people against terrorism. Iran cooperated with the US overthrow of the Taliban in Afghanistan, and likewise has been virtually an echo chamber for Washington’s policies toward Iraq, including the overthrow of Saddam Hussein and the establishment of a parliamentary system that will inevitably ensconce the Shiite majority. Occasional British and US propaganda trial balloons absurdly attempting to blame Shiite Iran for the Sunni Arab insurgency in Iraq have met with the yawns and derision they so richly deserve. Indeed, a wise administration could have enlisted Iran as an ally against al-Qaeda. It is shadowy Israeli operatives such as Yosef Bodansky who made the silly argument that Iran was behind al-Qaeda. …

      "Nous sommes tous les Américains." Indeed, the expressions of solidarity were met with shit.

      "They're telling us something we don't understand"
      General Charles de Gaulle, Mai '68

      by subtropolis on Tue May 02, 2006 at 11:45:06 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  Thanks to everybody... (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Cho, Sanuk

    ...for reading, commenting, and keeping this issue alive.

Permalink | 24 comments