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	<title>Road Out Of Babylon &#187; Terrorism/FalseFlag</title>
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		<title>Rundown of BP Staged Event</title>
		<link>http://www.roadoutofbabylon.com/2010/06/rundown-of-bp-staged-event/</link>
		<comments>http://www.roadoutofbabylon.com/2010/06/rundown-of-bp-staged-event/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Jun 2010 15:19:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Eugenics and the Green Agenda]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Terrorism/FalseFlag]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[
Evidence Points To BP Oil Spill False Flag





















- Sales of shares and stocks in days and weeks beforehand
- Halliburton link, acquisition of cleanup company days before explosion
- BP report cites undocumented tampering with well sealing equipment
- Government uses disaster to push for Carbon Tax, Nationalization talk
Steve Watson, Paul Joseph Watson &#38; Alex Jones
Prisonplanet.com
Tuesday, Jun 8th, [...]]]></description>
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<h1 class="subheadlinemain" style="font-family: Georgia, 'Times New Roman', Times, serif; font-size: 18px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 2px; padding-left: 0px; font-weight: normal; line-height: 23px; margin: 0px;"><a style="color: #000000; text-decoration: none; font-weight: normal; font-family: Georgia, 'Times New Roman', Times, serif; font-size: 24.13px;" title="Permanent Link to Evidence Points To BP Oil Spill False Flag" rel="bookmark" href="http://www.prisonplanet.com/evidence-points-to-bp-oil-spill-false-flag.html">Evidence Points To BP Oil Spill False Flag</a></h1>
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<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><img title="Evidence Points To BP Oil Spill False Flag  Photo" src="http://www.infowars.net/pictures/jun2010/080610oil.jpg" border="1" alt="Evidence Points To BP Oil Spill False Flag  080610oil" hspace="5" vspace="5" width="340" height="255" align="right" /></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><strong>- Sales of shares and stocks in days and weeks beforehand</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><strong>- Halliburton link, acquisition of cleanup company days before explosion</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><strong>- BP report cites undocumented tampering with well sealing equipment</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><strong>- Government uses disaster to push for Carbon Tax, Nationalization talk</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Steve Watson, Paul Joseph Watson &amp; Alex Jones<br />
<a style="color: #000000; text-decoration: none; font-weight: bold;" href="http://Prisonplanet.com/">Prisonplanet.com<br />
</a>Tuesday, Jun 8th, 2010</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Troubling evidence surrounding the Deepwater Horizon explosion on April 20th suggests that the incident could have been manufactured.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">On April 12th, just over one week before the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded, Halliburton, the world’s second largest oilfield services corporation, surprised some by acquiring Boots &amp; Coots, a relatively small but vastly experienced oil<br />
well control company.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">The company deals with fires and blowouts on oil rigs and oil wells. It was responsible for putting out roughly one third of the more than 700 oil well fires set in Kuwait by retreating Iraqi soldiers during the Gulf War.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">The deal itself is still under scrutiny with Boots and Coots <strong><a style="color: #000000; text-decoration: none; font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.marketwatch.com/story/robbins-umeda-llp-announces-an-investigation-of-the-acquisition-of-boots-coots-inc-by-halliburton-co-2010-04-12?reflink=MW_news_stmp" target="_blank">facing an ongoing investigation</a></strong> into “possible breaches of fiduciary duty and other violations of state law”</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Where this information gets really interesting is with the fact that <strong><a style="color: #000000; text-decoration: none; font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hSsGsiZ18JYxHwuLGeC7Tu4T2nLwD9FK91N02" target="_blank">Halliburton is named in the majority of some two dozen lawsuits</a></strong> filed since the explosion by Gulf Coast people and businesses who claim that the company is to blame for the disaster.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Halliburton was forced to admit in testimony at a congressional hearing last month that it carried out a cementing operation 20 hours before the Gulf of Mexico rig went up in flames. The lawsuits claim that four Halliburton workers stationed on the rig improperly capped the well.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">As the <strong><a style="color: #000000; text-decoration: none; font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/27/us/27rig.html" target="_blank">New York Times</a></strong> noted on May 26th, “BP officials chose, partly for financial reasons, to use a type of casing for the well that the company knew was the riskier of two options,”</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Workers from the rig and company officials have said that hours before the explosion, gases were leaking through the cement, which had been set in place by the oil services contractor, Halliburton. Investigators have said these leaks were the likely cause of the explosion.”</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">According to a 2007 study by Minerals Management Service, cementing was a factor in 18 of 39 rig blowouts in the gulf between 1992 and 2006.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Another intriguing connection Boots and Coots has to the Deepwater Horizon explosion <strong><a style="color: #000000; text-decoration: none; font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/25/us/25well.html" target="_blank">comes via Pat Campbell</a></strong>, the man BP has employed to cap the well beneath the ruined rig. Campbell worked for Boots and Coots as general manager for many years.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">BP has admitted to <strong><a style="color: #000000; text-decoration: none; font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.examiner.com/x-33986-Political-Spin-Examiner~y2010m6d6-BP-buys-Google-Yahoo-search-engine-words-to-keep-people-away-from-real-news-on-Gulf-oil-spill-disas" target="_blank">buying Yahoo and Google keywords</a></strong> in an attempt to control publicly available information in the wake of the catastrophe. It seems that the company is taking all the flack for the spill while the Halliburton link is being roundly ignored.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><a style="color: #000000; text-decoration: none; font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.scribd.com/doc/32663286/Deepwater-Horizon-Interim-Incident-Investigation-BP-s-Washington-Briefing" target="_blank"><strong>BP’s prepared testimony briefing</strong></a>, which has since leaked online, also intriguingly notes that the Hydraulic Control System on equipment designed to automatically seal the well in an emergency was modified without their knowledge sometime before the explosion.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">“the extent of these modifications is unknown at this time” states the report on page 37.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><img title="Evidence Points To BP Oil Spill False Flag  Photo" src="http://www.infowars.net/pictures/jun2010/080610BP.jpg" alt="Evidence Points To BP Oil Spill False Flag  080610BP" width="580" height="458" /></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Possible prior knowledge of the explosion is also evident via huge dumping of stocks and shares in the weeks and days prior to the incident.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><a style="color: #000000; text-decoration: none; font-weight: bold;" href="http://go2.wordpress.com/?id=725X1342&amp;site=radiopatriot.wordpress.com&amp;url=http%3A%2F%2Frawstory.com%2Frs%2F2010%2F0602%2Fmonth-oil-spill-goldman-sachs-sold-250-million-bp-stock%2F&amp;sref=http%3A%2F%2Fradiopatriot.wordpress.com%2F2010%2F06%2F04%2Fbp-oil-shares-sell-off-what-did-goldman-sachs-know-and-when-did-they-know-it%2F" target="_blank"><strong>Goldman Sachs dumped 44% of its shares in BP Oil </strong></a>during the first quarter – shares that subsequently lost 36 percent of their value, equating to $96 million.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Other asset management firms also sold huge blocks of BP stock in the first quarter. Though the amounts pale in comparison to Goldman’s holdings, Wachovia, owned by Wells Fargo, sold 98% of its shares in BP and Swiss bank UBS sold 97% of its BP shares.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Furthermore, as <strong><a style="color: #333333; text-decoration: none; font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/energy/oilandgas/7804922/BP-chief-Tony-Hayward-sold-shares-weeks-before-oil-spill.html" target="_blank">reported by the London Telegraph</a></strong> on June 5th, Tony Hayward, the chief executive of BP, sold £1.4 million of his shares in the fuel giant weeks before the spill.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">In the days before the Deepwater explosion, Obama had announced a new effort to explore for and lease new drilling locations in the deep Gulf and in Alaska. In the wake of the disaster, these plans <strong><a style="color: #000000; text-decoration: none; font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/may/27/obama-cancels-gulf-drilling-projects/" target="_blank">have been cancelled</a></strong> and BP is taking a PR bashing.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">All of which has been capitalized on by the Obama administration to <strong><a style="color: #000000; text-decoration: none; font-weight: bold;" href="http://edition.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/06/02/obama.oil.spill/index.html" target="_blank">reinvigorate talk of a carbon tax</a></strong> and has created the opportunity to reintroduce<strong><a style="color: #000000; text-decoration: none; font-weight: bold;" href="http://newsbusters.org/blogs/geoffrey-dickens/2010/05/17/matthews-obama-needs-nationalize-oil-industry" target="_blank"> the idea of nationalizing oil</a></strong>, which the <strong><a style="color: #000000; text-decoration: none; font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.foxnews.com/urgent_queue/index.html#a54ef44,2008-06-18" target="_blank">Democratic leadership has long sought</a></strong>.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">The full story of what is happening in the Gulf of Mexico is yet to emerge, there are <strong><a style="color: #000000; text-decoration: none; font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.businessinsider.com/confirmed-there-is-a-second-leaking-rig-near-the-deepwater-2010-6" target="_blank">rumours of more spills and an ongoing coverup</a></strong>. The site represents a $2.2 trillion source of wealth and power, a motive along with a plethora of suspicious activity that needs to be investigated further.</p>
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		<title>Haiti and the Seismic Weapon</title>
		<link>http://www.roadoutofbabylon.com/2010/01/haiti-and-the-seismic-weapon/</link>
		<comments>http://www.roadoutofbabylon.com/2010/01/haiti-and-the-seismic-weapon/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Jan 2010 03:49:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Terrorism/FalseFlag]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[
Thierry Meyssan
Voltaire Network
January 27, 2010
The controversy that followed the publication on our website of an article entertaining the possibility that the earthquake in Haiti was caused artificially, calls for clarification. Yes, seismic weapons do exist and the United States, among others, have them. Yes, the U.S. military forces were pre-positionned to be deployed to the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-family: Georgia, 'Times New Roman', Times, serif; line-height: 18px;"></p>
<h1 class="subheadlinemain" style="font-family: Georgia, 'Times New Roman', Times, serif; font-size: 18px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 2px; padding-left: 0px; font-weight: normal; line-height: 23px; margin: 0px;"><span style="line-height: 18px; font-size: 13px;"><strong><a style="color: #003366; text-decoration: underline;" href="http://www.voltairenet.org/article163729.html" target="_blank">Thierry Meyssan</a></strong></span></h1>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Voltaire Network<br />
January 27, 2010</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">The controversy that followed the publication on our website of an article entertaining the possibility that the earthquake in Haiti was caused artificially, calls for clarification. Yes, seismic weapons do exist and the United States, among others, have them. Yes, the U.S. military forces were pre-positionned to be deployed to the island. These facts are not conclusive in themselves but they certainly warrant heightened scrutiny into this matter.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">In publishing “Was the earthquake in Haiti caused by the United States”, our purpose was to bring out an issue that is stirring military and media circles in several countries, but which is being ignored in others [<a id="nh1" style="color: #003366; text-decoration: underline;" title="Was the earthquake in Haiti caused by the United States?, Voltaire Network, (...)" rel="footnote" href="http://www.voltairenet.org/article163729.html#nb1">1</a>]. What matters here is not to take a stand. In keeping with our approach, though often misunderstood, we maintain that it is impossible to have a good grasp of international relations without studying what the leaders of this planet are thinking.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Prevailing conformity has led to a situation where, while no one is ruffled when we report on contentious issues kindling in Washington, a general outcry is fueled when the controversy stems from a non-aligned country. It would appear that Europeans have a preconceived opinion that only “western” concerns are pertinent while all the others should not be taken seriously.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">One of our collaborators attempted to trace the origin of the allegation regarding the possible artificial causes of the earthquake in Haiti. He was concerned that the whole thing might have been a hoax launched by a certain David Booth (alias Sorcha Faal), which then penetrated government circles throughout the world. In the end, we are not sure exactly who is behind the allegation, but what we know for certain is that this issue is being heatedly discussed at the highest level in several countries in Latin America, Eastern Europe and Asia.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">As editor-in-chief of <em>Voltaire Network</em>, I made the decision to research and translate the dispatch from<em>VivéTv</em>, which had been disseminated as a communiqué on the website of the Communications Ministry of Venezuela, and to publish it together with the related video from <em>Russia Today</em>, preceded by the remark: “<em>Oddly enough, the Venezuelan channel designates the Russian Army as the source of these claims whereas the Russian channel attributes them to President Chávez</em>.”</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">While these elements were faithfully relayed by numerous newspapers, especially in the Middle East, they were distorted by the Atlanticist media which chose to reflect Sorcha Faal’s article. Faal pulled certain fragments from the <em>VivéTv</em> text, and by adding inverted commas put them into Hugo Chávez’s mouth. What was initially intended as a working hypothesis has been converted into the Government’s position. Some of these media outlets went so far as to completely fabricate the context in which President Chávez expressed himself, pointedly implying that the President and his audience suffer from acute anti-american frenzy and that <em>Voltaire Network</em> shares the same ailment.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">But instead of yielding to this manipulation, let us go deeper into this hypothesis.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><strong>How much do we know about seismic weapons at present ?</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">During the Second World War, a group of New Zealand researchers attempted to develop a device capable of provoking tsunamis that could be unleashed against Japan. The research work was conducted by Thomas Leech, an Australian national, at Auckland University behind the code name of “Project Seal”. Several small-scale test explosions were carried out successfully, between 1944 and 1945, at Whangaparaoa off the coast of Auckland.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">The United States deemed this programme to be as equally promising as the “Manhattan Project”, involving the development of the atomic bomb, and appointed Dr. Karl T. Compton to maintain the liaison between the two research units. Compton was an American physicist and president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1930 to 1948.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">The work started by Thomas Leech was pursued during the Cold War. In 1947, King George VI elevated him to the rank of Knight of the British Empire for his role in the elaboration of this new weapon. At the time, Project Seal was still a military secret and it was therefore not disclosed that Thomas Leech had in fact been rewarded for concocting the “tsunami bomb”. Subsequently, the US intelligence services covered it up by claiming that the research had never really existed and that the whole thing had been an artifice to impress the Soviets. However, the authenticity of Leech’s tests was established in 1999, when the New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs declassified part of the documentation. The research studies are officially back on track and taking place at the University of Waikato. [<a id="nh2" style="color: #003366; text-decoration: underline;" title="Tsunami bomb NZ’s devastating war secret and Devastating tsunami bomb (...)" rel="footnote" href="http://www.voltairenet.org/article163729.html#nb2">2</a>]</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Officially, at the end of the Vietnam War, the United States and the Soviet Union gave up environmental wars (earthquakes, tsunamis, environmental balance destabilization, atmospheric modification – clouds, rain, cyclones, tornadoes -, modification of the climate, ocean currents, the ozone layer and the ionosphere) upon signing the 1976 “Convention on the Prohibition of Military or Any Other Hostile Use of Environmental Modification Techniques”.It is not known whether the research undertaken by the Anglo-Saxons continued during the 60’s, but it was resumed by force of circumstances when atmospheric nuclear tests were abandoned in favour of sub-marine tests. The United States were afraid of provoking earthquakes and tsunamis unintentionally. They preferred to learn how to do it intentionally.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Nevertheless, in 1975, the USSR embarked on a new research, this time in the field of Magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) for the purpose of studying the earth’s crust and be able to anticipate earthquakes. The Soviets examined the possibility of provoking small quakes in order to forestall a big one. This research was quickly militarized and resulted in the construction of Pamir, the earthquake machine.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">After the dismemberment of the USSR, those in charge of this programme decided to go to the United States for lure of money, but the Pentagon refused to pay them since their research was incomplete. In 1995, when Russia was governed by Boris Yeltsin and oligarch Viktor Chernomyrdin, the US Air Force recruited the researchers working at their Nizhny Novgorod laboratory. They built a much more powerful machine, Pamir 3, that was tested successfully. At that point, the Pentagon bought the men together with the material and shipped them to the United States, where they were incorporated into the HAARP programme.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Various instances where the seismic weapon might have been employed have been contemplated, especially in Algeria and Turkey. However, the most discussed one is the 12 May 2008 earthquake in Sichuan (China). During the 30 minutes that preceded the earthquake, the inhabitants of the region observed atypical colours in the sky. While some interpreted these events as a sign that the sky was repudiating the Communist Party, others reacted in a more rational way. The same energy used to provoke the earthquake is also likely to have perturbed the ionosphere.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><strong>Back to Haiti</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Nothing distinguishes an artificial earthquake from a natural one; this being said, they have the knowhow to induce only superficial earthquakes, like the one in Haiti.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">What is particularly disturbing is the reaction of the United States. While the Western media are immersed in a controversy over the violation of Haiti’s sovereignty, the Latin American media are perplexed about the swiftness of GI deployment: as of the first day, more than 10000 soldiers and contractors arrived in Haiti. This logistical feat can be easily explained since these troops were already pre-positioned in the context of a military exercise. Under the orders of General P.K. Keen, Military Deputy Commander of U.S. Southern Command (USSOUTHCOM), they took part in an excercise simulating a humanitarian operation in Haiti after a hurricane. Keen and his staff had arrived a few days earlier. At the precise moment that the earth shook, they were already sheltered in the US Embassy, built in compliance with anti-earthquake norms; only two men who were not at the Embassy but at the Hotel Montana have been reported injured.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">General Keen has granted several interviews to the US media, which has provided ample coverage mainly focusing on the relief operations. While Keen’s presence in Port-au-Prince during the earthquake has been referred to several times, the reasons for his presence were never mentioned.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Among the objectives of the military exercise was the application of a new software enabling the NGOs and the armed forces to coordinate their humanitarian efforts. In the few minutes that followed the catastrophe, the software was put on line and 280 NGOs readily signed up.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">It is legitimate to question whether such coincidences are simply due to chance.</p>
<p></span></p>
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		<title>Breziznski Questioned on &#8220;Grand Chessboard&#8221;, Geopolitics</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Jan 2010 02:50:29 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>The Yemen Hidden Agenda: Behind the Al-Qaeda Scenarios, A Strategic Oil Transit Chokepoint</title>
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by F. William Engdahl









Global Research, January 5, 2010







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On December 25 US authorities arrested a Nigerian named Abdulmutallab aboard a Northwest Airlines flight from Amsterdam to Detroit on charges of having tried to blow up the plane with smuggled explosives. Since then reports have been broadcast from CNN, the New York [...]]]></description>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><em>On December 25 US authorities arrested a Nigerian named Abdulmutallab aboard a Northwest Airlines flight from Amsterdam to Detroit on charges of having tried to blow up the plane with smuggled explosives. Since then reports have been broadcast from CNN, the New York Times and other sources that he was “suspected” of having been trained in Yemen for his terror mission. What the world has been subjected to since is the emergence of a new target for the US ‘War on Terror,’ namely a desolate state on the Arabian Peninsula, Yemen. A closer look at the background suggests the Pentagon and US intelligence have a hidden agenda inYemen.</em></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify">For some months the world has seen a steady escalation of US military involvement in Yemen, a dismally poor land adjacent to Saudi Arabia on its north, the Red Sea on its west, the Gulf of Aden on its south, opening to the Arabian Sea, overlooking another desolate land that has been in the headlines of late, Somalia. The evidence suggests that the Pentagon and US intelligence are moving to militarize a strategic chokepoint for the world’s oil flows, Bab el-Mandab, and using the Somalia piracy incident, together with claims of a new Al Qaeda threat arising from Yemen, to militarize one of the world’s most important oil transport routes. In addition, undeveloped petroleum reserves in the territory between Yemen and Saudi Arabia are reportedly among the world’s largest.<span> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify">
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify">The 23-year-old Nigerian man charged with the failed bomb attempt, Abdulmutallab, reportedly has been talking, claiming he was sent on his mission by Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), based in Yemen. This has conveniently turned the world’s attention on Yemen as a new center of the alleged Al Qaeda terror organization.</p>
<p align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">Notably, Bruce Riedel, a 30-year CIA veteran who advised President Obama on the policy leading to the Afghan troop surge, wrote in his blog of the alleged ties of the Detroit bomber to Yemen, “The attempt to destroy Northwest Airlines Flight 253 en route from Amsterdam to Detroit on Christmas Day underscores the growing ambition of Al Qaeda&#8217;s Yemen franchise, which has grown from a largely Yemeni agenda to become a player in the global Islamic jihad in the last year…The weak Yemeni government of President Ali Abdallah Salih, which has never fully controlled the country and now faces a host of growing problems, will need significant American support to defeat AQAP.”[1].</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><strong>Some basic Yemen geopolitics</strong></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify">
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify">Before we can say much about the latest incident, it is useful to look more closely at the Yemen situation. Here several things stand out as peculiar when stacked against Washington’s claims about a resurgent Al Qaeda organization in the Arabian Peninsula.</p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">In early 2009 the chess pieces on the Yemeni board began to move. Tariq al-Fadhli, a former jihadist leader originally from South Yemen, broke a 15 year alliance with the Yemeni government of President Ali Abdullah Saleh and announced he was joining the broad-based opposition coalition known as the Southern Movement (SM). Al-Fadhli had been a member of the Mujahideen movement in Afghanistan in the late 1980’s. His break with the government was reported in Arab and Yemeni media in April 2009. Al-Fadhli’s break with the Yemen dictatorship gave new power to the Southern Movement (SM). He has since become a leading figure in the alliance.</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">Yemen itself is a synthetic amalgam created after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1990, when the southern Peoples’ Democratic Republic of Yemen (PDRY) lost its main foreign sponsor. Unification of the northern Yemen Arab Republic and the southern PDRY state led to a short-lived optimism that ended in a brief civil war in 1994, as southern army factions organized a revolt against what they saw as the corrupt crony state rule of northern President Ali Abdullah Saleh. President Saleh has held a one-man rule since 1978, first as President of North Yemen<span> </span>(the Yemen Arab Republic) and since 1990 as President of the unified new Yemen. The southern army revolt failed as Saleh enlisted al-Fadhli and other Yemeni Salafists, followers of a conservative interpretation of Islam, and jihadists to fight the formerly Marxist forces of the Yemen Socialist Party in the south.</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">Before 1990, Washington and the Saudi Kingdom backed and supported Saleh and his policy of Islamization as a bid to contain the communist south.[2] Since then Saleh has relied on a strong Salafist-jihadi movement to retain a one-man dictatorial rule. The break with Saleh by al-Fadhli and his joining the southern opposition group with his former socialist foes marked a major setback for Saleh.</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">Soon after al-Fadhli joined the Southern Movement coalition, on April 28, 2009 protests in the southern Yemeni provinces of Lahj, Dalea and Hadramout intensified. There were demonstrations by tens of thousands of dismissed military personnel and civil servants demanding better pay and benefits, demonstrations that had been taking place in growing numbers since 2006. The April demonstrations included for the first time a public appearance by al-Fadhli. His appearance served to change a long moribund southern socialist movement into a broader nationalist campaign. It also galvanized President Saleh, who then called on Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Cooperation Council states for help, warning that the entire Arabian Peninsula would suffer the consequences.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">Complicating the picture in what some call a failed state, in the north Saleh faces an al-Houthi Zaydi Shi’ite rebellion. On September 11, 2009, in an Al-Jazeera TV interview, Saleh accused Iraq’s Shi’ite opposition leader, Muqtada al-Sadr, and also Iran, of backing the north Yemen Shi’ite Houthist rebels in an Al-Jazeera TV interview. Yemen’s Saleh declared, “We cannot accuse the Iranian official side, but the Iranians are contacting us, saying that they are prepared for a mediation. This means that the Iranians have contacts with them [the Houthists], given that they want to mediate between the Yemeni government and them. Also, Muqtada al-Sadr in al-Najaf in Iraq is asking that he be accepted as a mediator. This means they have a link.”[3]</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">Yemen authorities claim they have seized caches of weapons made in Iran, while the Houthists claim to have captured Yemeni equipment with Saudi Arabian markings, accusing Sana’a <span> </span>(the capital of Yemen and site of the US Embassy) of acting as a Saudi proxy. Iran has rejected claims that Iranian weapons were found in north Yemen, calling claims of support to the rebels as baseless. [4]</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><strong><span lang="EN-GB">What about Al Qaeda?</span></strong></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">The picture that emerges is one of a desperate US-backed dictator, Yemen’s President Saleh, increasingly losing control after two decades as despotic ruler of the unified Yemen. Economic conditions in the country took a drastic downward slide in 2008 when world oil prices collapsed. Some 70% of the state revenues derive from Yemen’s oil sales. The central government of Saleh sits in former North Yemen in Sana’a, while the oil is in former South Yemen. Yet Saleh controls the oil revenue flows. Lack of oil revenue has made Saleh’s usual option of buying off opposition groups all but impossible.<span> </span></span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">Into this chaotic domestic picture comes the January 2009 announcement, prominently featured in select Internet websites, that Al Qaeda, the alleged global terrorist organization created by the late CIA-trained Saudi, Osama bin Laden, has opened a major new branch in Yemen for both Yemen and Saudi operations.<span> </span></span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">Al Qaeda in Yemen released a statement through online jihadist forums Jan. 20, 2009 from the group’s leader Nasir al-Wahayshi, announcing formation of a single al Qaeda group for the Arabian Peninsula under his command. According to al-Wahayshi, the new group, al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, would consist of his former Al Qaeda in Yemen, as well as members of the defunct Saudi Al Qaeda group. The press release claimed, interestingly enough, that a Saudi national, a former Guantanamo detainee (Number 372), Abu-Sayyaf al-Shihri, would serve as al-Wahayshi’s deputy.</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">Days later an online video from al-Wahayshi appeared under the alarming title, “We Start from Here and We Will Meet at al-Aqsa.” Al-Aqsa refers to the al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem that Jews know as Temple Mount, the site of the destroyed Temple of Solomon, which Muslims call Al Haram Al Sharif. The video threatens Muslim leaders &#8212; including Yemeni’s President Saleh, the Saudi royal family, and Egyptian President Mubarak &#8212; and promises to take the jihad from Yemen to Israel to “liberate” Muslim holy sites and Gaza, something that would likely detonate World War III if anyone were mad enough to do it.</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">Also in that video, in addition to former Guantanamo inmate al-Shihri, is a statement from Abu-al-Harith Muhammad al-Awfi, identified as a field commander in the video, and allegedly former Guantanamo detainee 333. As it is well-established that torture methods are worthless to obtain truthful confessions, some have speculated that the real goal of CIA and Pentagon interrogators at Guantanamo prison since September 2001, has been to use brutal techniques to train or recruit sleeper terrorists who can be activated on command by US intelligence, a charge difficult to prove or disprove. The presence of two such high-ranking Guantanamo graduates in the new Yemen-based Al Qaeda is certainly ground for questioning.</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">Al Qaeda in Yemen is apparently anathema to al-Fadhli and the enlarged mass-based Southern Movement. In an interview, al-Fadhli declared, “I have strong relations with all of the jihadists in the north and the south and everywhere, but not with al-Qaeda.”[5] That has not hindered Saleh from claiming the Southern Movement and al Qaeda are one and the same, a convenient way to insure backing from Washington.</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">According to US intelligence reports, there are a grand total of perhaps 200 Al Qaeda members in southern Yemen. [6]</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">Al-Fadhli gave an interview distancing himself from al Qaeda in May 2009, declaring, “We [in South Yemen] have been invaded 15 years ago and we are under a vicious occupation. So we are busy with our cause and we do not look at any other cause in the world. We want our independence and to put an end to this occupation.”[7] Conveniently, the same day, Al Qaeda made a large profile declaring its support for southern Yemen’s cause.</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">On May 14, in an audiotape released on the internet, al-Wahayshi, leader of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, expressed sympathy with the people of the southern provinces and their attempt to defend themselves against their “oppression,” declaring, “What is happening in Lahaj, Dhali, Abyan and Hadramaut and the other southern provinces cannot be approved. We have to support and help [the southerners].” He promised retaliation: “The oppression against you will not pass without punishment… the killing of Muslims in the streets is an unjustified major crime.” [8]</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">The curious emergence of a tiny but well-publicized al Qaeda in southern Yemen amid what observers call a broad-based popular-based Southern Movement front that eschews the radical global agenda of al Qaeda, serves to give the Pentagon a kind of casus belli to escalate US military operations in the strategic region.</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">Indeed, after declaring that the Yemen internal strife was Yemen’s own affair, President Obama ordered air strikes in Yemen. The Pentagon claimed its attacks on December 17 and 24 killed three key al Qaeda leaders but no evidence has yet proven this. Now the Christmas Day Detroit bomber drama gives new life to Washington’s “War on Terror” campaign in Yemen. Obama has now offered military assistance to the Saleh Yemen government.</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><strong><span lang="EN-GB">Somali Pirates escalate as if on cue</span></strong></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">As if on cue, at the same time CNN headlines broadcast new terror threats from Yemen, the long-running Somalia pirate attacks on commercial shipping in the same Gulf of Aden and Arabian Sea across from southern Yemen escalated dramatically after having been reduced by multinational ship patrols.</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">On December 29, Moscow’s RAI Novosti reported that Somali pirates seized a Greek cargo vessel in the Gulf of Aden off Somalia&#8217;s coast. Earlier the same day a British-flagged chemical tanker and its 26 crew were also seized in the Gulf of Aden. In a sign of sophisticated skills in using western media, pirate commander Mohamed Shakir told the British newspaper <em>The Times</em> by phone, &#8220;We have hijacked a ship with [a] British flag in the Gulf of Aden late yesterday.&#8221; The US intelligence brief, <em>Stratfor,</em> reports that <em>The Times</em>, owned by neo-conservative financial backer, Rupert Murdoch, is sometimes used by Israeli intelligence to plant useful stories.</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">The two latest events brought a record number of attacks and hijackings for 2009. As of December 22, attacks by Somali pirates in the Gulf of Aden and the east coast of Somalia numbered 174, with 35 vessels hijacked and 587 crew taken hostage so far in 2009, almost all successful pirate activity, according to the International Maritime Bureau&#8217;s Piracy Reporting Center. The open question is, who is providing the Somali “pirates” with arms and logistics sufficient to elude international patrols from numerous nations?</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">Notably, on January 3, President Saleh got a phone call from Somali president Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed in which he briefed president Saleh on latest developments in Somalia. Sheikh Sharif, whose own base in Mogadishu is so weak he is sometimes referred to as President of Mogadishu Airport, told Saleh he would share information with Saleh about any terror activities that might be launched from Somali territories targeting stability and security of Yemen and the region.</span></p>
<p class="bodytext" style="margin-top: auto; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: auto; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><strong><span lang="EN-GB">The Oil chokepoint and other oily affairs</span></strong></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB">The strategic significance of the region between Yemen and Somalia becomes the point of geopolitical interest. It is the site of Bab el-Mandab, one of what the US Government lists as seven strategic world oil shipping chokepoints. The US Government Energy Information Agency states that “c</span>losure of the Bab el-Mandab could keep tankers from the Persian Gulf from reaching the Suez Canal/Sumed pipeline complex, diverting them around the southern tip of Africa. The Strait of Bab el-Mandab is a chokepoint between the horn of Africa and the Middle East, and a strategic link between the Mediterranean Sea and Indian Ocean.” [9]</p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify">
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify">Bab el-Mandab, between Yemen, Djibouti, and Eritrea connects the Red Sea with the Gulf of Aden and the Arabian Sea. Oil and other exports from the Persian Gulf must pass through Bab el-Mandab before entering the Suez Canal. In 2006, the Energy Department in Washington reported that an estimated 3.3 million barrels a day of oil flowed through this narrow waterway to Europe, the United States, and Asia. Most oil, or some 2.1 million barrels a day, goes north through the Bab el-Mandab to the Suez/Sumed complex into the Mediterranean.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify">
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify">An excuse for a US or NATO militarization of the waters around Bab el-Mandab would give Washington another major link in its pursuit of control of the seven most critical oil chokepoints around the world, a major part of any future US strategy aimed at denying<span> </span>oil flows to China, the EU or any region or country that opposes US policy. Given that significant flows of Saudi oil pass through Bab el-Mandab, a US military control there would serve to deter the Saudi Kingdom from becoming serious about transacting future oil sales with China or others no longer in dollars, as was recently reported by UK <em>Independent</em> journalist Robert Fisk.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify">It would also be in a position to threaten China’s oil transport from Port Sudan on the Red Sea just north of Bab el-Mandab, a major lifeline in China’s national energy needs.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify">
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify">In addition to its geopolitical position as a major global oil transit chokepoint, Yemen is reported to hold some of the world’s greatest untapped oil reserves. Yemen’s Masila Basin and Shabwa Basin are reported by international oil companies to contain “world class discoveries.”[10] France’s Total and several smaller international oil companies are engaged in developing Yemen’s oil production. Some fifteen years ago I was told in a private meeting with a well-informed Washington insider that Yemen contained “enough undeveloped oil to fill the oil demand of the entire world for the next fifty years.” Perhaps there is more to Washington’s recent Yemen concern than a rag-tag al Qaeda whose very existence as a global terror organization has been doubted by seasoned Islamic experts.</p>
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<p><span lang="EN-GB"></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><em><strong>F. William Engdahl</strong> is the author of <strong>Full Spectrum Dominance: Totalitarian Democracy in the New World Order</strong></em></p>
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<p><strong>Notes</strong></p>
<div></div>
<div><span style="font-size: x-small;">1. Bruce Riedel, <em>The Menace of Yemen</em>, December 31, 2009, accessed in </span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-12-31/the-menace-of-yemen/?cid=tag:all1"><span style="font-size: x-small;">http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-12-31/the-menace-of-yemen/?cid=tag:all1</span></a><span style="font-size: x-small;">.</span></div>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-size: x-small;">2. <span> </span>Stratfor, <em>Yemen</em><em>: Intensifying Problems for the Government</em>, May 7, 2009.<br />
</span><span style="font-size: 10pt;">3. Cited in Terrorism Monitor, </span><em><span style="font-size: 10pt;" lang="EN-GB">Yemen President Accuses Iraq’s Sadrists of Backing the Houthi Insurgency,</span></em><span style="font-size: 10pt;" lang="EN-GB"> Jamestown Foundation, Volume: 7 Issue: 28, September 17, 2009.</span><span style="font-size: 10pt;"></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-size: x-small;">4. <span> </span>NewsYemen, September 8, 2009; Yemen Observer, September 10, 2009.</span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-size: x-small;">5. Albaidanew.com, May 14, 2009, cited in Jamestown Foundation, op.cit.</span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-size: x-small;">6. <span lang="EN-GB">Abigail Hauslohner, <em>Despite U.S. Aid, Yemen Faces Growing al-Qaeda Threat</em>, Time, December 22, 2009, accessed in<a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1949324,00.html#ixzz0be0NL7Cv">www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1949324,00.html#ixzz0be0NL7Cv</a>.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-size: x-small;">7. Tariq al Fadhli, in <span lang="EN-GB">Al-Sharq al-Awsat, May 14, 2009, cited in Jamestown Foundation, op. cit.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-size: x-small;">8. <span lang="EN-GB">al-Wahayshi interview, al Jazeera, May 14, 2009.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify">9. <span style="font-size: 10pt;">US Government, Department of Energy, Energy Information Administration, <em>Bab el-Mandab</em>, accessed in</span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.eia.doe.gov/cabs/World_Oil_Transit_Chokepoints/Full.html"><span style="font-size: 10pt;">http://www.eia.doe.gov/cabs/World_Oil_Transit_Chokepoints/Full.html</span></a>.</p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-size: x-small;">10 <span lang="EN-GB">Adelphi Energy</span><span lang="EN-GB">, <em>Yemen</em></span><em><span lang="EN-GB"> Exploration Blocks 7 &amp; 74</span></em><span lang="EN-GB">, accessed in <a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.adelphienergy.com.au/projects/Proj_Yemen.php">http://www.adelphienergy.com.au/projects/Proj_Yemen.php</a>.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span lang="EN-GB"><span style="font-size: x-small;"> </span></span></p>
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		<title>Dope Inc. on the Subcontinent</title>
		<link>http://www.roadoutofbabylon.com/2010/01/639/</link>
		<comments>http://www.roadoutofbabylon.com/2010/01/639/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 02 Jan 2010 01:12:58 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Terrorism/FalseFlag]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Bankster Money Cartel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Great Game]]></category>

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Obama and Afghanistan: America’s Drug-Corrupted War
by Peter Dale Scott













Global Research, January 1, 2010







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The presidential electoral campaign of Barack Obama in 2008, it was thought, “changed the political debate in a party and a country that desperately needed to take a new direction.”[1] Like most preceding [...]]]></description>
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<div class="articleTitle" style="font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 18px; font-weight: bold; text-align: left; color: #800000; text-decoration: none; padding: 0px;">Obama and Afghanistan: America’s Drug-Corrupted War</div>
<div class="articleAuthorName" style="font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 14px; font-weight: bold; text-align: left; color: #000000; text-decoration: none; padding: 0px;">by Peter Dale Scott</div>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 36pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-size: 14pt;"><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: small;"> </span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">The presidential electoral campaign of Barack Obama in 2008, it was thought, “changed the political debate in a party and a country that desperately needed to take a new direction.”<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[1]</span></span></span></span> Like most preceding presidential winners dating back at least to John F. Kennedy, what moved voters of all descriptions to back Obama was the hope he offered of significant change. Yet within a year Obama has taken decisive steps, not just to continue America’s engagement in Bush’s Afghan War, but significantly to enlarge it into Pakistan. If this was change of a sort, it was a change that few voters desired.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Those of us convinced that a war machine prevails in Washington were not surprised. The situation was similar to the disappointment experienced with Jimmy Carter: Carter was elected in 1976 with a promise to cut the defense budget. Instead, he initiated both an expansion of the defense budget and also an expansion of U.S. influence into the Indian Ocean.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[2]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">As I wrote in <em>The Road to 9/11</em>, after Carter’s election</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 36pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span>It appeared on the surface that with the blessing of David Rockefeller’s Trilateral Commission, the traditional U.S. search for unilateral domination would be abandoned. But…the 1970s were a period in which a major “intellectual counterrevolution” was mustered, to mobilize conservative opinion with the aid of vast amounts of money…. By the time SALT II was signed in 1979, Carter had consented to significant new weapons programs and arms budget increases (reversing his campaign pledge).</span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[3]</span></span></span></span><span> </span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span>I noted further that the complex strategy for reversing Carter’s promises was revived for a new mobilization in the 1990s during the Clinton presidency, in which a commission headed by Donald Rumsfeld was prominent.</span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[4]</span></span></span></span></span><span> </span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><strong><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">The Vietnam War as a Template for Afghanistan</span></span></strong></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">It is as if Washington had emerged with only one objective from America’s failure in Vietnam: the urge to do it again and get it right. But the principal obstacle to victory in Afghanistan is the same as in Vietnam: the lack of a viable government to defend. The importance of this similarity has been stressed by Thomas H. Johnson, coordinator of anthropological research studies at the Naval Postgraduate School, and his co-author Chris Mason. In their memorable phrase, “<span>the Vietnam War is less a metaphor for the conflict in Afghanistan than it is a template:”</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 28pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span>It is an</span><span> oft-cited maxim that in all the conflicts of the past century, the United States has refought its last war. A number of analysts and journalists have mentioned the war in Vietnam recently in connection with Afghanistan.</span><span>1</span><span> Perhaps fearful of taking this analogy too far, most have backed away from it. They should not—the Vietnam War is less a metaphor for the conflict in Afghanistan than it is a template. For eight years, the United States has engaged in an almost exact political and military reenactment of the Vietnam War, and the lack of self-awareness of the repetition of events 50 years ago is deeply disturbing.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[5]</span></span></span></span></span><span> </span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Many of the common features of an unpopular corrupted government have been well summarized by Johnson and Mason. In their words, quoting Jeffrey Record,</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 28pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span>“the fundamental political obstacle to an enduring American success in Vietnam [was] a politically illegitimate, militarily feckless, and thoroughly corrupted South Vietnamese client regime.” Substitute the word “Afghanistan” for the words “South Vietnam” in these quotations and the descriptions apply precisely to today’s government in Kabul. Like Afghanistan, South Vietnam at the national level was a massively corrupt collection of self-interested warlords, many of them deeply implicated in the profitable opium trade, with almost nonexistent legitimacy outside the capital city. The purely military gains achieved at such terrible cost in our nation’s blood and treasure in Vietnam never came close to exhausting the enemy’s manpower pool or his will to fight, and simply could not be sustained politically by a venal and incompetent set of dysfunctional state institutions where self-interest was the order of the day.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[6]</span></span></span></span></span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">If Johnson had written a little later, he might have added that a major CIA asset in Afghanistan was Ahmed Wali Karzai, brother of President Hamid Karzai; and that Ahmed Wali Karzai was a major drug trafficker who used his private force to help arrange a flagrantly falsified election result.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[7]</span></span></span></span> This is a fairly exact description of Ngo dinh Nhu in Vietnam, President Ngo dinh Diem’s brother, an organizer of the Vietnamese drug traffic whose dreaded Can Lao secret police helped, among other things, to organize a falsified election result there.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[8]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">This pattern of a corrupt near relative, often involved in drugs, is a recurring feature of regimes installed or supported by U.S. influence. There were similar allegations about Chiang Kai-shek’s brother-in-law T.V. Soong, Mexican President Echevarría’s brother-in-law Rubén Zuno Arce, and the Shah of Iran’s sister. In the case of Ngo dinh Nhu, it was the absence of a popular base for his externally installed presidential brother that led to drug involvement, “to provide the necessary funding” for political repression.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[9]</span></span></span></span> This analogy to the Karzais is pertinent.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">An additional similarity, not noted by Johnson, is that America initially engaged in Vietnam in support of an embattled and unpopular minority, the Roman Catholics who had thrived under the French. America has twice made the same mistake in Afghanistan. Initially, after the Russian invasion of 1980, the bulk of American aid went to Gulbeddin Hekmatyar, a leader both insignificant in and unpopular with the mujahedin resistance; the CIA is said to have supported Hekmatyar, who became a drug trafficker to compensate for his lack of a popular base, because he was the preferred client of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), which distributed American and Saudi aid.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">When America re-engaged in 2001, it was to support the Northern Alliance, a drug-trafficking Tajik-Uzbek minority coalition hateful to the Pashtun majority south of the Hindu Kush. Just as America’s initial commitment to the Catholic Diem family fatally alienated the Vietnamese countryside, so the American presence inAfghanistan is weakened by its initial dependence on the Tajiks of the minority Northern Alliance. (The Roman Catholic minority in Vietnam at least shared a language with the Buddhists in the countryside. The Tajiks speak Dari, a version of Persian unintelligible to the Pashtun majority.)</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">According to an important article by Gareth Porter,</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 36pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span>Contrary to the official portrayal of the Afghan National Army (ANA) as ethnically balanced, the latest data from U.S. sources reveal that the Tajik minority now accounts for far more of its troops than the Pashtuns, the country&#8217;s largest ethnic group.</span><span>…. Tajik domination of the ANA feeds Pashtun resentment over the control of the country&#8217;s security institutions by their ethnic rivals, while Tajiks increasingly regard the Pashtun population as aligned with the Taliban.<br />
</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 36pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span><br />
The leadership of the army has been primarily Tajik since the ANA was organised in 2002, and Tajiks have been overrepresented in the officer corps from the beginning. But the original troop composition of the ANA was relatively well-balanced ethnically. The latest report of the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, issued Oct. 30, shows that Tajiks, which represent 25 percent of the population, now account for 41 percent of all ANA troops who have been trained, and that only 30 percent of the ANA trainees are now Pashtuns. </span><span>A key reason for the predominance of Tajik troops is that the ANA began to have serious problems recruiting troops in the rural areas of Kandahar and Helmand provinces by mid-2007.</span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[10]</span></span></span></span></span><span> </span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">This problem derives from a major strategic error committed by the U.S. first in Vietnam and now repeated: the effort to impose central state authority on a country that had always been socially and culturally diverse.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[11]</span></span></span></span> Johnson and Mason illustrate Diem’s lack of legitimacy with a quote from Eric Bergerud:</span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 28pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span>The Government of Vietnam (GVN) lacked legitimacy with the rural peasantry, the </span><span>largest segment of the population&#8230;The peasantry perceived the GVN to be aloof, corrupt, and inefficient&#8230;South Vietnam’s urban elite possessed the outward manifestations of a foreign culture&#8230;more importantly, this small group held most of the wealth and power in a poor nation, and the attitude of the ruling elite toward the rural population was, at best, paternalistic and, at worst, predatory.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[12]</span></span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoFootnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Thomas Johnson rightly deplores the U.S. effort to impose Kabul’s will on an even more diverse Afghanistan. As he has written elsewhere,</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoFootnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></span></p>
<p class="MsoFootnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 36pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">The characterization of Afghanistan by the 19th Century British diplomat Sir Henry Rawlinson as `consist[ing] of a mere collection of tribes, of unequal power and divergent habits, which are held together more or less closely, according to the personal character of the chief who rules them. The feeling of patriotism, as it is known in Europe, cannot exist among Afghans, for there is no common country’ is still true today and suggests critical nuances for any realistic Afghanistan reconstruction and future political agenda.”<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; color: black; font-family: Cambria;">[13]</span></span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">According to Thomas Johnson, the first eight years of the U.S. in Afghanistan have also seen the Army repeating the strategy of targeting the enemy that failed inVietnam:</span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 28pt;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Since 2002, the prosecution of the war in Afghanistan—at all levels—has been based on an implied strategy of attrition via clearing operations virtually identical to those pursued in Vietnam. In Vietnam, they were dubbed “search and destroy missions;” in Afghanistan they are called “clearing operations” and “compound searches,” but the purpose is the same—to find easily replaced weapons or clear a tiny, arbitrarily chosen patch of worthless ground for a short period, and then turn it over to indigenous security forces who can’t hold it, and then go do it again somewhere else…. General McChrystal is the first American commander since the war began to understand that protecting the people, not chasing illiterate teenage boys with guns around the countryside, is the basic principle of counterinsurgency. Yet four months into his command, little seems to have changed, except for an eight-year overdue order to stop answering the enemy’s prayers by blowing up compounds with air strikes to martyr more of the teenage boys<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[14]</span></span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Johnson and Mason’s<strong> </strong>depiction of the Vietnam template<strong> </strong>underlying Afghanistan is important. But there is a glaring omission in their description of power in the Afghan countryside:</span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 36pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">When it is in equilibrium, rural Afghan society is a triangle of power formed by the tribal elders, the mullahs, and the government…. In times of peace and stability, the longest side of the triangle is that of the tribal elders, constituted through the jirga system. The next longest, but much shorter side is that of the mullahs. Traditionally and historically, the government side is a microscopic short segment. However, after 30 years of blowback from the Islamization of the Pashtun begun by General Zia in Pakistan and accelerated by the Soviet-Afghan War, the religious side of the triangle has become the longest side of jihad has grown stronger and more virulent.</span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">This remains true, but is dated by its omission of drug-trafficking, and the militias supported by drug-trafficking, which since 1980 have become a more and more important element in the power-balance. Sometimes the drug-traffic adds to the power of tribal elders like Jalaluddin Haqqani or Haji Bashir Noorzai, with tribal drug networks often passed from father to son. But today one of the most important power-holders is the drug-trafficker Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a Ghilzai Pashtun from the north without a significant tribal base. Hekmatyar is much like General Dan Van Quang during the Vietnam War, in that his power continues to depend in part on his sophisticated heroin trafficking network in Afghanistan’s Kunar and Nuristan provinces.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[15]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">The more we recognize that today drugs are a major factor in both the economy and the power structure of Afghanistan, the more we must recognize that an even better template for the Afghan war is not the Vietnam war, where drugs were important but not central, but the CIA’s drug-funded undeclared war in Laos, 1959-75.</span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><strong><span>Afghanistan</span></strong><strong><span> and the Laos Template</span></strong></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">I have quoted at great length from Johnson’s pessimistic essay in <em>Military Review</em>, partly because I believe it deserves to be read by a non-military audience, but also because I believe that his excellent analogies to Vietnam are even more pertinent if we recall the CIA’s hopeless fiasco in Laos.</span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span>Vietnam</span><span>, for all its problems with Catholic and Montagnard minorities, was essentially a state with a single language and a single, French-imposed system of law.Laos, in contrast, was little more than an arbitrary collection of about 100 tribes with different languages, in which the dominant Tai-speaking Lao Loum tribes compromised, in the 1960s, little more than half of the total population. Faced with an intractable mountainous terrain, the French wisely devoted little energy to establishing a central power in Laos, which then had one capital for the north and another for the south.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[16]</span></span></span></span> Like Afghanistan and in contrast to Nepal, Laosremained and remains one of the world’s last countries without a railroad.</span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">To supplement their own minimal presence in Laos, the French relied on two minorities with two completely different non-Tai languages, the Vietnamese and the Méo or Hmong. The protracted French war in Indochina produced two combating armies in Laos, the pro-French Royal Laotian Army, in uneasy alliance with Hmong guerrillas, and the pro-Vietnamese Pathet Lao.</span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Thus Laos, when it became nominally independent in 1954, was a quasi-state with two armies, a collection of tribes with different languages and customs, and tribe-dividing borders defined arbitrarily to suit western convenience. All this might have remained relatively stable, had not Americans arrived with naïve notions of “nation-building.” Misguided efforts to establish a strong central government rapidly produced two dominating consequences: massive corruption (even worse than Vietnam’s), and civil war.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[17]</span></span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span>It would appear that the CIA in Laos, reflecting the opposition of the Dulles brothers to any form of neutralism, <em>intended</em> to divide the country and make it an anti-Communist battlefield, rather than let it slumber quietly under the guidance of its first post-French prime minister, the neutralist Souvanna Phouma (nephew of the king). </span>A CIA officer told <em><span>Time </span></em><span>magazine in 1961 that t</span>he CIA’s aim<span> “was to ‘polarize’ the communist and anti-communist factions in Laos.”<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[18]</span></span></span></span> If this was truly the aim, the CIA succeeded, creating a conflict in which the U.S. dropped more than two million tons of bombs on one part of Laos, more than in both Europe and the Pacific during World War Two.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[19]</span></span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Despite this absurd and criminal U.S. over-commitment, the end result was to turn Laos, a profoundly Buddhist nation with an anti-Vietnamese bias, into what is nominally one of the last remaining Communist countries in the world. And our principal ally, a Hmong faction allied earlier with the French, suffered devastating, almost genocidal casualties. (The London <em>Guardian</em> charged in 1971 that Hmong villages who “try to find their own way out of the war – even if it is simply by staying neutral and refusing to send their 13-year-olds to fight in the CIA army – are immediately denied American rice and transport, and ultimately bombed by the U.S. Air Force.”)<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[20]</span></span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">No one has ever claimed that in Laos, as opposed to Vietnam, “the system worked,”<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[21]</span></span></span></span> or that the U.S. might have prevailed had it not been for faulty decision-making at the civilian level.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[22]</span></span></span></span> From a humanitarian standpoint, America’s campaign in Laos, was from the outset a disaster if not indeed a major war crime. Only one faction profited from that war, international drug traffickers – whether Corsican, Nationalist Chinese, or American.</span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">With the beginning of CIA support for him in 1959, the CIA’s client Phoumi Nosavan, for the first time, directly involved his army in the opium traffic, “as an alternative source of income for his [Laotian] army and government…. This decision ultimately led to the growth of northwest Laos as one of the largest heroin-producing centers in the world” in the late 1960s.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[23]</span></span></span></span> (The CIA not only supported General Ouan Rattikone (Phoumi’s successor) and his drug-funded army, it even supplied airplanes to senior Laotian generals which soon “ran opium for them” without interference.)<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[24]</span></span></span></span><span> </span>Conversely, when the US withdrew from Laos in the 1970s, opium production plummeted, from an estimated 200 tons in 1975 to 30 tons in 1984.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[25]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><strong>America</strong><strong>’s Addiction to Drug-Assisted War: Afghanistan the 1980s</strong></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">It is hard to demonstrate the CIA, when unilaterally initiating a military conflict in Laos in 1959, foresaw the resulting huge increase in Laotian opium production. But two decades later this experience did not deter Brzezinski, Carter’s national security adviser, from unilaterally initiating contact with drug-trafficking Afghans in 1978 and 1979.</span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span>It is clear that this time the Carter White House foresaw the drug consequences. In 1980 </span><span>White House drug advisor David Musto told the White House Strategy Council on Drug Abuse that “we were going into Afghanistan to support the opium growers…. Shouldn’t we try to avoid what we had done in Laos?”</span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[26]</span></span></span></span><span> Denied access by the CIA to data to which he was legally entitled, Musto took his concerns public in May 1980, noting in a <em>New York Times</em> Op Ed that Golden Crescent heroin was already (and for the first time) causing a medical crisis in New York. And he warned, presciently, that “this crisis is bound to worsen.”</span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[27]</span></span></span></span><span> </span></span></p>
<p align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">The CIA, in conjunction with its creation the Iranian intelligence agency SAVAK, was initially trying to move to the right the regime of Afghan president Mohammed Daoud Khan, whose objectionable policy (like that of Souvanna Phouma before him) was to maintain good relations with both the Soviet Union and the west. In 1978 SAVAK- and CIA-supported Islamist agents soon arrived from Iran “with bulging bankrolls,” trying to mobilize a purge of left-wing officers in the army and a clamp-down on their party the PDPA. The result of this provocative polarization was the same as in Laos: a confrontation in which the left, and not the right, soon prevailed.</span><a name="_ednref28"></a><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> In a coup that was at least partly defensive, left-wing officers overthrew and killed Daoud; they installed in his place a left-wing regime so extreme and unpopular that by 1980 the USSR (as Brzezinski had predicted) intervened to install a more moderate faction.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[29]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
<p align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">By<span> May 1979 the CIA was in touch with Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, </span><span style="color: #333333;">the <em>mujahedin</em> warlord with perhaps the smallest following inside Afghanistan, and also the leading<em>mujahedin</em> drug-trafficker.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; color: #333333; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[30]</span></span></span></span> Hekmatyar, famous for throwing acid in the faces of women not wearing burkas, was not the choice of the Afghan resistance, but of the Pakistani intelligence service (ISI), perhaps because he was the only Afghan leader willing to accept the British-drawn Durand Line as the Afghan-Pakistan boundary. As an Afghan leader in 1994 told Tim Weiner of the <em>New York Times</em>:</span></span></p>
<p style="margin-left: 36pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span style="color: #333333;">“</span>We didn&#8217;t choose these leaders. The United States made Hekmatyar by giving him his weapons. Now we want the United States to shake these leaders and make them stop the killing, to save us from them.”<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[31]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
<p align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Robert D. Kaplan reported his personal experience that Hekmatyar was “loathed by all the other party leaders, fundamentalist and moderate alike.”<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[32]</span></span></span></span><span style="color: #333333;"> </span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span style="color: #333333;">This decision by ISI and CIA belies the usual American rhetoric that the US was assisting an Afghan liberation movement.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; color: #333333; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[33]</span></span></span></span> </span>In the next decade of anti-Soviet resistance, more than half of America’s aid went to Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, who soon became “one of Afghanistan’s leading drug lords.” Brzezinski was also soon in contact with Pakistan’s emissary Fazle ul-Haq, a man who by 1982 would be listed by Interpol as an international narcotics trafficker.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[34]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">The consequences were swiftly felt in America, where heroin from the Golden Crescent, negligible before 1979, amounted in 1980 to 60 percent of the U.S.market.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[35]</span></span></span></span> And by 1986, for the first time, the region supplied 70 percent of the high-grade heroin in the world, and supplied a new army of 650,000 addicts inPakistan itself. Witnesses confirmed that the drug was shipped out of the area on the same Pakistan Army trucks which shipped in &#8220;covert&#8221; US military aid.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[36]</span></span></span></span> Yet before 1986 the only high-level heroin bust in Pakistan was made at the insistence of a single Norwegian prosecutor; none were instigated by the seventeen narcotics officers in the U.S. Embassy. <span>Eight tons of Afghan-Pakistani morphine base from a single Pakistani source supplied the Sicilian mafia &#8220;Pizza Connection&#8221; inNew York, said by the FBI supervisor on the case to have been responsible for 80% of the heroin reaching the United States between 1978 and 1984.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[37]</span></span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span>Meanwhile, CIA Director William </span>Casey appears to have promoted a plan suggested to him in 1980 by the former French intelligence chief Alexandre de Marenches, that the CIA supply drugs on the sly to Soviet troops.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[38]</span></span></span></span> Although de Marenches subsequently denied that the plan, Operation Mosquito, went forward, there are reports that heroin, hashish, and even cocaine from Latin America soon reached Soviet troops; and that along with the CIA-ISI-linked bank BCCI, &#8220;a few American intelligence operatives were deeply enmeshed in the drug trade&#8221; before the war was over.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[39]</span></span></span></span> Maureen Orth heard from Mathea Falco, head of International Narcotics Control for the State Department under Jimmy Carter, that the CIA and ISI together encouraged the <em>mujahedin</em> to addict the Soviet troops.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[40]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><strong><span style="font-family: Verdana;">America’s Return in 2001, Again With the Support of Drug-Traffickers</span></strong></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">The social costs of this drug-assisted war are still with us: there are said, for example, to be now five million heroin addicts in Pakistan alone. And yet America in 2001 decided to do it again: to try, with the assistance of drug traffickers, to impose nation-building on a quasi-state with at least a dozen major ethnic groups speaking unrelated languages. In a close analogy to the use of the Hmong in Laos, America initiated its Afghan campaign in 2001 in concert with a distinct minority, the Tajik-dominated Northern Alliance. In a closer analogy still, the CIA in 2000 (in the last weeks of Clinton’s presidency) chose as its principal ally Ahmad Shah Massoud of the Northern Alliance, despite the objection of other national security advisers that “Massoud was a drug trafficker; if the CIA established a permanent base [with him] in the Panjshir, it risked entanglement with the heroin trade.”<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[41]</span></span></span></span><span> </span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span>There was no ambiguity about the U.S. intention to use drug traffickers to initiate its ground position in Afghanistan. </span>The CIA mounted its coalition against the Taliban in 2001 by recruiting and even importing drug traffickers, usually old assets from the 1980s. An example was Haji Zaman who had retired to Dijon inFrance, whom “British and American officials…met with and persuaded … to return to Afghanistan.”<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[42]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">In Afghanistan in 2001 as in 1980, and as in Laos in 1959, the U.S. intervention has since been a bonanza for the international drug syndicates. With the increase of chaos in the countryside, and number of aircraft flying in and out of the country, opium production more than doubled, from 3276 metric tonnes in 2000 (and 185 in 2001, the year of a Taliban ban on opium) to 8,200 metric tonnes in 2007.</span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0.1pt; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0.1pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Why does the U.S. intervene repeatedly on the same side as the most powerful local drug traffickers? Some years ago I summarized the conventional wisdom on this matter:</span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0.1pt; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0.1pt; margin-left: 36pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Partly this has been from <em>realpolitik</em> &#8211; in recognition of the local power realities represented by the drug traffic. Partly it has been from the need to escape domestic political restraints: the traffickers have supplied additional financial resources needed because of US budgetary limitations, and they have also provided assets not bound (as the U.S. is) by the rules of war. … These facts…have led to enduring intelligence networks involving both oil and drugs, or more specifically both petrodollars and narcodollars. These networks, particularly in the Middle East, have become so important that they affect, not just the conduct of US foreign policy, but the health and behavior of the US government, US banks and corporations, and indeed the whole of US society.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[43]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Persuaded in part by the analysis of authors like Michel Chossudovsky and James Petras, I would now stress more heavily that American banks, as well as oil majors, benefit significantly from drug trafficking. A Senate staff report has estimated “that $500 billion to $1 trillion in criminal proceeds are laundered through banks worldwide each year, with about half of that amount moved through United States banks.”<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[44]</span></span></span></span></span> The London Independent reported in 2004 that drug trafficking constitutes &#8220;the third biggest global commodity in cash terms after oil and the arms trade.&#8221;<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[45]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span> </span><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> </span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Petras concludes that the U.S. economy has become a narco-capitalist one, dependent on the hot or dirty money, much of it from the drug traffic.</span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 28pt;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">As Senator Levin summarizes the record: &#8220;Estimates are that $500 billion to $1 trillion of international criminal proceeds are moved internationally and deposited into bank accounts annually. It is estimated half of that money comes to the United States&#8221;….</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 28pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span>Washington</span><span> and the mass media have portrayed the U.S. in the forefront of the struggle against narco trafficking, drug laundering and political corruption: the image is of clean white hands fighting dirty money from the Third world (or the ex-Communist countries). The truth is exactly the opposite. U.S. banks have developed a highly elaborate set of policies for transferring illicit funds to the U.S., investing those funds in legitimate businesses or U.S. government bonds and legitimating them. The U.S. Congress has held numerous hearings, provided detailed exposés of the illicit practices of the banks, passed several laws and called for stiffer enforcement by any number of public regulators and private bankers. Yet the biggest banks continue their practices, the sums of dirty money grows exponentially, because both the State and the banks have neither the will nor the interest to put an end to the practices that provide high profits and buttress an otherwise fragile empire.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[46]</span></span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span>In the wake of the 2008 economic crisis, this analysis found support from the claim of </span>Antonio Maria Costa, head of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, that “Drugs money worth billions of dollars kept the financial system afloat at the height of the global crisis.” According to the London <em>Observer</em>, Costa</span></p>
<p style="margin-left: 36pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">said he has seen evidence that the proceeds of organised crime were &#8220;the only liquid investment capital&#8221; available to some banks on the brink of collapse last year. He said that a majority of the $352bn (£216bn) of drugs profits was absorbed into the economic system as a result…. Costa said evidence that illegal money was being absorbed into the financial system was first drawn to his attention by intelligence agencies and prosecutors around 18 months ago. &#8220;In many instances, the money from drugs was the only liquid investment capital. In the second half of 2008, liquidity was the banking system&#8217;s main problem and hence liquid capital became an important factor,&#8221; he said.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[47]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><strong><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Why This Drug-Corrupted War Will Continue</span></strong></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span>Thus the war machine that co-opted Obama into his incipient escalations of an unwinnable war is not just a bureaucratic cabal inside Washington. It is solidly grounded in and supported by a wide coalition of forces in our society. </span>For this reason the war machine will not be dissuaded by sensible advice from within the establishment, such as the recommendation for Afghan counterterrorism from the RAND Corporation:</span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 36pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Minimize the use of U.S. military force. In most operations against al Qa&#8217;ida, local military forces frequently have more legitimacy to operate and a better understanding of the operating environment than U.S. forces have. This means a light U.S. military footprint or none at all.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[48]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">It will not be dissuaded by the conclusion of a recent study for the Carnegie Endowment<span> </span>that &#8220;the presence of foreign troops is <em>the most important element</em> driving the resurgence of the Taliban.&#8221;<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[49]</span></span></span></span><span> </span>To justify its global strategic posture of what it calls “full-spectrum dominance,” the Pentagon badly needs the “war against terror” in Afghanistan, just as a decade ago it needed the counter-productive “war against drugs” in Colombia.<span> </span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Full-spectrum dominance is of course not just an end in itself, it is also lobbied for by far-flung American corporations overseas, especially oil companies like Exxon Mobil with huge investments in Kazakhstan and elsewhere in Central Asia. As Michael Klare noted in his book <em>Resource Wars</em>, a secondary objective of the U.S.campaign in Afghanistan was &#8220;to consolidate U.S. power in the Persian Gulf and Caspian Sea area, and to ensure continued flow of oil.&#8221;<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[50]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">The global drug traffic itself will continue to benefit from the protracted conflict generated by “full-spectrum dominance” in Afghanistan, and some of the beneficiaries may have been secretly lobbying for it. And I fear that all the client intelligence assets organized about the movement of Afghan heroin throughCentral Asia and beyond will, without a clear change in policy, continue as before to be protected by the CIA. And America’s superbanks like Citibank – the banks allegedly “too big to fail” – are now since the downturn even more dependant than before on the hundreds of billions of illicit profits which they launder each year.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[51]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">In both Afghanistan and Laos (as opposed to Vietnam) heroin has been by far the principal export, and so important that simply to curtail the production of opium has risked impoverishing those in the areas where opium was grown. This was the reason given for not disrupting heroin flows in the severe winter of 2001-02, the first year of the American invasion of Afghanistan. The economy was so devastated that, without income from opium, large numbers of Afghans might have starved.</span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">According to Australian journalist Michael Ware, <em>Time</em> Magazine’s correspondent in Kandahar, opium is still the main support of the Afghan economy, as well the main support for both the Karzai government and the Taliban opposition:</span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 36pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">You take away the opium and you suck the oxygen out of this economy and you’ll be treading on the toes of significant players who have built empires around the opium trade, and that includes political and military figures as well as criminal and business figures here in Kandahar.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[52]</span></span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">A consistent bias of U.S. news reporting on opium and heroin in Afghanistan has been to blame the Taliban for their production, and not also the government. For example, the <em>New York Times</em> reported on November 27, 2008 that</span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 28pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">“Afghanistan has produced so much opium in recent years that the Taliban are cutting poppy cultivation and stockpiling raw opium in an effort to support prices and preserve a major source of financing for the insurgency, Antonio Maria Costa, the executive director of the United Nations drug office [UNODC], says.”<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[53]</span></span></span></span> </span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">But as Jeremy Hammond responds,</span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 36pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">In commentary attached to the UNODC report, Mr. Costa asks, “Who collects this money? Local strong men. In other words, by year end, war-lords, drug-lords and insurgents will have extracted almost half a billion dollars of tax revenue from drug farming, production and trafficking.” Notably, Mr. Costa does not answer his question with “the Taliban”, but includes a much broader range of participants who profit from the trade that includes, but is in no way limited to, the Taliban.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[54]</span></span></span></span> </span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Citing the statistics in the UNODC’s annual reports, Hammond estimates that the reported Taliban revenues from opium ($75-100 million) are only about 3 percent of the total earned income in Afghanistan ($3.4 billion), which in turn is only about five percent of the UNODC estimate of what that crop is worth in the world market ($64 billion).<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[55]</span></span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span><span style="font-family: Verdana;">It is because of the larger share of drug profits going to supporters of the Kabul government that U.S. strategies to attack the Afghan drug trade are explicitly limited to attacking drug traffickers supporting the Taliban.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[56]</span></span></span></span> Such strategies have the indirect effect of increasing the opium market share of the past and present CIA assets in the Karzai regime (headed by Hamid Karzai, a former CIA asset),<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[57]</span></span></span></span> such as the president’s brother Ahmed Wali Karzai, an active CIA asset, and Abdul Rashid Dostum, a former CIA asset.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[58]</span></span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">As I have observed elsewhere about the U.S. campaign against the FARC and cocaine in Colombia, the aim of all U.S. anti drug campaigns abroad has never been the hopeless ideal of eradication. The aim of all such campaigns has been to alter market share: to target specific enemies and thus ensure that the drug traffic remains under the control of those traffickers who are allies of the state security apparatus and/or the CIA. This was notably true of Laos in the 1960s, when the CIA intervened militarily with air support to assist Ouan Rattikone’s army, in a battle over a contested opium caravan in Laos.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[59]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><strong><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Consequences for America of a Drug-Corrupted War</span></strong></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">But this toleration of the traffic has led to another similarity with Vietnam and Laos in the 1960s: the increasing addiction of GIs to heroin, Afghanistan’s principal export. Despite the denial one has come to expect from high places, it is (according to Salon’s Shaun McCanna).</span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 36pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">not difficult to find a soldier who has returned from Afghanistan with an addiction. Nearly every veteran of Operation Enduring Freedom I have spoken with was familiar with heroin&#8217;s availability on base, and most knew at least one soldier who used while deployed.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[60]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><strong><span style="font-size: 14pt;"><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: small;"> </span></span></strong></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">And the reported easy availability of heroin outside Afghanistan’s Bagram air base, like that four decades ago outside Vietnam’s American base at Long Binh, points to another alarming similarity. Just as at the height of the Vietnam war, heroin was shipped to the United States in body bags containing cadavers,<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[61]</span></span></span></span> so now we hear from Heneral Mahmut Gareev, a former Soviet commander in Afghanistan that</span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 36pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Americans themselves admit that drugs are often transported out of Afghanistan on American planes. Drug trafficking in Afghanistan brings them about 50 billion dollars a year – which fully covers the expenses tied to keeping their troops there. Essentially, they are not going to interfere and stop the production of drugs.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[62]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Gareev’s charge has been repeated in one form or another by a number of other sources, including Pakistani General Hamid Gul, a former ISI commander:</span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 36pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">“Abdul Wali Karzai is the biggest drug baron of Afghanistan,” he stated bluntly. He added that the drug lords are also involved in arms trafficking, which is “a flourishing trade” in Afghanistan. “But what is most disturbing from my point of view is that the military aircraft, American military aircraft are also being used. You said very rightly that the drug routes are northward through the Central Asia republics and through some of the Russian territory, and then intoEurope and beyond. But some of it is going directly. That is by the military aircraft. I have so many times in my interviews said, ‘Please listen to this information, because I am an aware person.’ We have Afghans still in Pakistan, and they sometimes contact and pass on the stories to me. And some of them are very authentic. I can judge that. So they are saying that the American military aircraft are being used for this purpose. So, if that is true, it is very, very disturbing indeed.”<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[63]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Another slightly different testimony is from General Khodaidad Khodaidad, the current Afghan minister of counter narcotics:</span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 36pt;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">The Afghan minister of counter narcotics says foreign troops are earning money from drug production in Afghanistan. General Khodaidad Khodaidad said the majority of drugs are stockpiled in two provinces controlled by troops from the US, the UK, and Canada, IRNA reported on Saturday. He went on to say that NATO forces are taxing the production of opium in the regions under their control.<span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[64]</span></span></span></span></span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">I do not accept these charges as proven, despite the number of additional sources for them. None of the sources quoted here can be considered an objective source with no axe to grind, and worse charges still are easy to find in wilds of the Internet.</span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">However the charges are plausible, because of history. Just as in Vietnam and Laos, the United States made its initial alliances in Afghanistan with drug traffickers, both in 1980 and again in 2001; and this is a major factor explaining the endemic corruption of the U.S.-sponsored Karzai regime today. There should be an official Congressional investigation whether the United States did not intend for its Afghan assets, just as earlier in Burma, Laos, and Thailand, to supplement their CIA subsidies with income from drug trafficking.</span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">In short, the impasse the U.S. faces in Afghanistan, in its efforts to support an unpopular and corrupt regime, must be understood in the light of its past relations to the drug traffic there – a situation which resembles the past U.S. involvement in Laos even more than in Vietnam. It is this sustained pattern of intervention in support of drug economies, and with the support of drug traffickers, that so depresses observers who had hoped desperately that, in this respect, Obama would bring a change.</span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">The question remains: how many Americans, Afghans, and Pakistanis will have to die, before we can put an end to this drug-corrupted and drug-corrupting war?</span></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="justify"><em><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><strong>Peter Dale Scott</strong>, a former Canadian diplomat and English Professor at the University of California, Berkeley, is a poet, writer, and researcher. He was born inMontreal in 1929, the only son of the poet </span></em><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.peterdalescott.net/frs.html"><em><span style="font-family: Verdana;">F.R. Scott</span></em></a><em><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> and the painter </span></em><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.peterdalescott.net/mds.html"><em><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Marian Scott</span></em></a><em><span style="font-family: Verdana;">. His prose books include The War Conspiracy (1972), The Assassinations: Dallas and Beyond (in collaboration, 1976), Crime and Cover-Up: The CIA, the Mafia, and the Dallas-Watergate Connection (1977), The Iran-Contra Connection (in collaboration, 1987), Cocaine Politics: Drugs, Armies, and the CIA in Central America (in collaboration, 1991, 1998), Deep Politics and the Death of JFK (1993, 1996), </span></em><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.maryferrell.org/mffweb/archive/viewer/showDoc.do?docId=1507"><em><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Deep Politics Two</span></em></a><em><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> (1994, 1995, 2006), </span></em><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.peterdalescott.net/Dates3.html"><em><span style="font-family: Verdana;">Drugs Oil and War</span></em></a><em><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, March 2003), </span></em><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.peterdalescott.net/q.html"><em><span style="font-family: Verdana;">The Road to 9/11</span></em></a><em><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2007), and </span></em><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.maryferrell.org/mffweb/archive/viewer/showDoc.do?docId=1103"><em><span style="font-family: Verdana;">The War Conspiracy: JFK, 9/11, and the Deep Politics of War</span></em></a><em><span style="font-family: Verdana;"> (Ipswich, MA: Mary Ferrell Foundation Press, 2008).</span></em></p>
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<div><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><strong>Notes</strong><br />
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<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[1]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> John Nichols, “Obama&#8217;s Campaign Merits a Peace Prize,” <em>Nation</em> (blogs), October 10, 2009,</span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.thenation.com/blogs/thebeat/482916/obama_s_campaign_merits_a_peace_prize"><span style="font-size: x-small;">http://www.thenation.com/blogs/thebeat/482916/obama_s_campaign_merits_a_peace_prize</span></a><span style="font-size: x-small;">.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[2]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Peter Dale Scott, <em>The Road to 9/11: Wealth, Empire, and the Future of America</em> (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2007), 65-69.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[3]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Scott, <em>The Road to 9/11</em>, 66-67.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[4]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Scott, <em>Road to 9/11</em>, 67-68, referring to the Rumsfeld Commission to Assess the Ballistic Missile Threat to the United States.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[5]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Thomas H. Johnson and M. Chris Mason, “Refighting the Last War: Afghanistan and the Vietnam Template,” <em>Military Review</em>, November-December 2009, 1.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[6]</span></span></span></span> <span style="font-size: 10pt;">Johnson and Mason, “Refighting the Last War,”, 5, citing </span><span style="font-size: 10pt;">Jeffrey Record, “How America’s Own Military Performance in Vietnam Aided and Abetted the “North’s” Victory, in Marc Jason Gilbert, ed. <em>Why the North Won the Vietnam War</em> (New York: Palgrave, 2002), 119.</span></span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[7]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> <em>New York Times</em>, October 28, 2009.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[8]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Stanley Karnow, <em>Vietnam: A History</em> (New York: Penguin, 1997), 239; A.J. Langguth, <em>Our Vietnam</em> (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2000), 99; Alfred W. McCoy, <em>The Politics of Heroin </em>(Chicago: Lawrence Hill Books/ Chicago Review Press, 2003), 203 (drugs).</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[9]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> McCoy, <em>The Politics of Heroin</em>, 203.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[10]</span></span></span></span> <span style="font-size: 10pt;">Gareth Porter, “</span><span style="font-size: 10pt;">Tajik Grip on Afghan Army Signals New Ethnic War,” IPS News, November 28, 2009, <a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=49461">http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=49461</a>.</span></span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[11]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Spencer Tucker, <em>Vietnam</em> (Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky, 1999), 87.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[12]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Eric Bergerud, <em>The Dynamics Of Defeat: The Vietnam War In Hau Nghia Province</em> (Boulder, Co: Westview Press, 1991) 3; quoted in Johnson and Mason, “Afghanistanand the Vietnam Template,” 5.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[13]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Thomas H. Johnson, “Ismail Khan, Heart, and Iranian Influence,” <em>Strategic Insights</em>, July 2004, </span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.ccc.nps.navy.mil/si/2004/jul/johnsonJul04.asp"><span style="font-size: x-small;">http://www.ccc.nps.navy.mil/si/2004/jul/johnsonJul04.asp</span></a><span style="font-size: x-small;">.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[14]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Johnson and Mason, “Refighting the Last War,” 7-8.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[15]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Gretchen Peters, <em>Seeds of Terror: How Heroin Is Bankrolling the Taliban and Al Qaeda</em> (New York: Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin’s Press, 2009), 127-29.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[16]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> The southern provinces were administered directly by a <em>résident supérieur</em> in Vientiane, who also supervised , but indirectly, the quasi-independent northern Kingdom of Louangphrabang.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[17]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Corruption within the U.S. Aid program (or boondoggle) in Laos, centered about bribes paid by CIA contractor Willis Bird, produced a Congressional investigation. See Scott, <em>Drugs, Oil and War</em>, 196, Martin E. Goldstein, <em>American Policy Toward Laos</em>, 186-87; U.S. Congress, House <em>U.S. Aid Operations in Laos</em>, House Report no. 546, 86<sup>th</sup>Cong., 1<sup>st</sup> Sess. (Washington: GPO, 1959).</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[18]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: 10pt;"> <em>Time</em>, March 17, 1961; discussion in Scott, <em>War Conspiracy</em>, 78<em><span style="font-style: normal;">.</span></em></span></span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[19]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: 10pt;"> Keith Quincy, <em>Hmong: history of a people</em>‎<span> </span>Cheney, WA: Eastern Washington University, 1995), 163.</span> <span style="font-size: 10pt;">To this day the CIA’s fact sheet on Cambodia lists, as the chief environmental problem in Laos, “unexploded ordnance” (all of it American); see <em><span style="font-style: normal;">CIA, The World Factbook,</span></em></span><em> </em></span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><em><span style="font-style: normal;"><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/la.html"><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/la.html</span></a><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">.</span></span></em></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[20]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> <em>Guardian</em> (London), October 14, 1971. Cf. McCoy, <em>Politics of Heroin,</em> 320-21.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[21]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Cf. Leslie H. Gelb and Richard K. Betts, <em>The Irony of Vietnam: The System Worked</em> (Washington: Brookings Institution Press, 1979).</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[22]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Mark Moyar, <em>Triumph Forsaken: The Vietnam War, 1954-1965</em> (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006).</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[23]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> McCoy, <em>Politics of Heroin</em>, 300.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[24]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> John Prados, <em>Lost Crusader: the Secret Wars of CIA Director William Colby </em>(New York: Oxford UP: 2003), 168.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[25]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Scott, <em>Drugs, Oil, and War</em>, 40.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[26]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> McCoy, <em>Politics of Heroin</em>, 461; citing interview with Dr. David Musto.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[27]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> David Musto, <em>New York Times</em>, May 22, 1980; quoted in McCoy, <em>Politics of Heroin</em>, 462.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[28]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Douglas Little, <em>American Orientalism: The United States and the Middle East since 1945</em> (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2002)<em>,</em> 223; Diego Cordovez and Selig S. Harrison, <em>Out of Afghanistan: the Inside Story of the Soviet Withdrawal</em> (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995), 16-17, 23-28.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[29]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Scott, <em>Road to 9/11</em>, 77-79; Little, <em>American Orientalism</em>, 150.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[30]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Scott, <em>Drugs, Oil, and War</em>, 46, 49; McCoy, <em>Politics of Heroin</em>, 475-78.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[31]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> <em>New York</em><em> Times</em>, 3/13/94.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[32]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Robert D. Kaplan, <em>Soldiers of God: With Islamic Warriors in Afghanistan and Pakistan</em> (New York: Random House, 1990), 68-69.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[33]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Brzezinski for example writes that “I pushed a decision through the SCC to be more sympathetic to those Afghans who were determined to preserve their country’s independence” (Brzezinski, <em>Power and Principle</em>, 427). On the same page he writes that “I also consulted with the Saudis and the Egyptians regarding the fighting inAfghanistan.” He is silent about the early, decisive, and ill-fated contact with Pakistan.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[34]</span></span></span></span> <span style="font-size: 10pt;">Scott, <em>Road to 9/11</em>, 73-75, citing Christina Lamb, <em>Waiting for Allah: Pakistan’s Struggle for Democracy </em>(London: H. Hamilton, 1991), 222; cf. </span><span style="font-size: 10pt;">McCoy,<em> Politics of Heroin</em>, 479</span><span style="font-size: 10pt;">. Fazle ul-Haq was the governor of Pakistan’s North-West Frontier Province; at the same time he was also an important CIA contact and supporter of the Afghan mujahideen, some of whom &#8212; it was no secret &#8212; were supporting themselves by major opium and heroin trafficking through the NWFP. However, after lengthy correspondence with Fazle ul-Haq’s son, I am persuaded that there are </span><span style="font-size: 10pt;">no known grounds to accuse Fazle ul-Haq of having profited personally from the drug traffic. See “</span><span style="font-size: 10pt;">Clarification from Peter Dale Scott re. Fazle Haq,” 911Truth.org, <a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.911truth.org/article.php?story=20090223165146219">http://www.911truth.org/article.php?story=20090223165146219</a>.</span></span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[35]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Scott, <em>Road to 9/11</em>, 73-75; citing McCoy, <em>Politics of Heroin</em>, 475 (leading drug lords), 464 (60 percent).</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[36]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> McCoy, <em>Politics of Heroin</em>, 461-64, 474-80; Lawrence Lifshultz, “Inside the Kingdom of Heroin,” <em>Nation</em>, November 14, 1988: Peters, <em>Seeds of Terror</em>, 37-39.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[37]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Ralph Blumenthal, <em>Last Days of the Sicilians</em> (New York: Pocket Books, 1988), 119, 314.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[38]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Cooley, <em>Unholy Wars</em>, 128-29; Beaty and Gwynne, <em>Outlaw Bank</em>, 305-06.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt;"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[39]</span></span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: 10pt;"> Beaty and Gwynne, 306; cf. 82; also Allix, <em>La petite cuillère</em>, 35, 95; Peters, <em>Seeds of Terror</em>, 45-46.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt;"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[40]</span></span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: 10pt;"> Maureen Orth, <em>Vanity Fair</em>, March 2002, 170-71. A Tajik sociologist added that she knew “drugs were massively distributed at that time,” and that she often heard how Russian soldiers were “invited to taste.”</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[41]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Steve Coll, <em>Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001</em> (New York: Penguin Press, 2004), 536.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[42]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Philip Smucker, <em>Al Qaeda’s Great Escape: The Military and the Media on Terror’s Trail</em> (Washington: Brassey’s, 2004), 9. On December 4, 2001, <em>Asia Times</em> reported that a convicted Pakistani drug baron and former parliamentarian, Ayub Afridi, was also released from prison to participate in the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan (</span></span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.atimes.com/ind-pak/CL04Df01.html"><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">http://www.atimes.com/ind-pak/CL04Df01.html</span></a><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">); Scott, <em>Road to 9/11</em>, 125.</span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">[43]</span></span></span></span></span><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;"> Peter Dale Scott, &#8220;Afghanistan, Colombia, Vietnam: The Deep Politics of Drugs and Oil,&#8221;<br />
</span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.peterdalescott.net/qov.html"><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">http://www.peterdalescott.net/qov.html</span></a><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">.</span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[44]</span></span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> </span></span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://hsgac.senate.gov/110999_report.htm.U.S"><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">U.S</span></a><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">. Congress, Senate, Minority staff report for Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations Hearing on Private Banking and Money Laundering: a Case Study of Opportunities and Vulnerabilities (November 9, 1999), </span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://hsgac.senate.gov/110999_report.htm"><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">http://hsgac.senate.gov/110999_report.htm</span></a><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">. These figures are both much used and much disputed, along with their relevance. But even if the real figures are only half those estimated by the Senate report, dirty money would appear to be a structural part of the U.S. economy. Those who deny this remind me of the economists who, as late as the 1950s, argued that U.S. foreign trade (then listed at about 2 percent of GNP) was too small to be a significant element in the U.S. GNP. No one would make that argument today.</span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[45]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> <em>Independent </em>(London), February 29, 2004. Cf. Michel Chossudovsky, “The Spoils of War: Afghanistan&#8217;s Multibillion Dollar Heroin Trade,” GlobalResearch, May 5, 2005,</span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&amp;code=CHO20050614&amp;articleId=91"><span style="font-size: x-small;">http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&amp;code=CHO20050614&amp;articleId=91</span></a><span style="font-size: x-small;">.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[46]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> James Petras, “`Dirty Money’ Foundation of U.S. Growth and Empire,” from <em>La Jornada</em>, May 19, 2001, Narco News 2001, </span></span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.narconews.com/petras1.html"><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">http://www.narconews.com/petras1.html</span></a><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">.</span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[47]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Rajeev Syal, “Drug money saved banks in global crisis, claims UN advisor,” Observer, December 13, 2009, </span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/global/2009/dec/13/drug-money-banks-saved-un-cfief-claims"><span style="font-size: x-small;">http://www.guardian.co.uk/global/2009/dec/13/drug-money-banks-saved-un-cfief-claims</span></a><span style="font-size: x-small;">.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[48]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> RAND Corporation, “How Terrorist Groups End: Implications for Countering al Qa&#8217;ida,” Research Brief, RB-9351-RC (2008),</span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.rand.org/pubs/research_briefs/RB9351/index1.html"><span style="font-size: x-small;">http://www.rand.org/pubs/research_briefs/RB9351/index1.html</span></a><span style="font-size: x-small;">.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[49]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Gilles Dorronsoro, “Focus and Exit: an Alternative Strategy for the Afghan War,” Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, January 2009,</span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://carnegieendowment.org/files/afghan_war-strategy.pdf"><span style="font-size: x-small;">http://carnegieendowment.org/files/afghan_war-strategy.pdf</span></a><span style="font-size: x-small;">.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[50]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Michael T. Klare. <em>Resource Wars: The New Landscape of Global Conflict</em> (Henry Holt, New York 2001; quoted in David Michael Smith, “The U.S. War in Afghanistan,”<em>The Canadian</em>, April 19, 2006, </span></span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.agoracosmopolitan.com/home/Frontpage/2006/04/19/01181.html"><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">http://www.agoracosmopolitan.com/home/Frontpage/2006/04/19/01181.html</span></a><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">, emphasis added. Cf. Scott, <em>Road to 9/11</em>, 169-70.</span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[51]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> </span></span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://hsgac.senate.gov/110999_report.htm.U.S"><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">U.S</span></a><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">. Congress, Senate, Minority staff report for Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations Hearing on Private Banking and Money Laundering: a Case Study of Opportunities and Vulnerabilities (November 9, 1999), </span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://hsgac.senate.gov/110999_report.htm"><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">http://hsgac.senate.gov/110999_report.htm</span></a><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span style="font-size: x-small;">.<span> </span></span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[52]</span></span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> “Afghanistan - America&#8217;s Blind Eye,” ABC/TV (Australia), April 10, 2002, Reporter: Mark Corcoran,</span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.mickware.info/2002/files/2b3c5632e1c8fa1ad68b6f83ae91a8c3-93.php"><span style="font-size: x-small;">http://www.mickware.info/2002/files/2b3c5632e1c8fa1ad68b6f83ae91a8c3-93.php</span></a><span style="font-size: x-small;">.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[53]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Kirk Kraeutler, “U.N. Reports That Taliban Is Stockpiling Opium,”<strong> </strong><em>New York Times</em>, November 27, 2008.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[54]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Jeremy R. Hammond, “New York Times Misleads on Taliban Role in Opium Trade,” <em>Foreign Policy Journal</em>, November 29, 2008,</span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.foreignpolicyjournal.com/2008/11/29/new-york-times-misleads-on-taliban-role-in-opium-trade/"><span style="font-size: x-small;">http://www.foreignpolicyjournal.com/2008/11/29/new-york-times-misleads-on-taliban-role-in-opium-trade/</span></a><span style="font-size: x-small;">.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[55]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Personal communication of December 29, 2009, citing UNODC Reports of 2008 and 2009.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[56]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> James Risen, U.S. to Hunt Down Afghan Lords Tied to Taliban<em>, New York Times</em>, August 10, 2009: ”United States military commanders have told Congress that…only those [drug traffickers] providing support to the insurgency would be made targets.”</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[57]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Nick Mills, <em>Karzai: the failing American intervention and the struggle for Afghanistan</em> (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley, 2007), 79.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[58]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> <em>New York Times</em>, October 27, 2009.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[59]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Valentine, <em>Strength of the Pack</em>, 333.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[60]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: 10pt;"> Shaun McCanna, “It’s Easy for Soldiers to Score Heroin in Afghanistan,”Salon, August 1, 2007, </span></span></span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2007/08/07/afghan_heroin/"><span style="font-size: 10pt;"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2007/08/07/afghan_heroin/</span></span></a><span style="font-size: 10pt;"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">. Cf. Megan Carpentier, “Is The Military Ignoring The Heroin Problem In The Ranks?”, AirAmerica.com, October 20, 2009, </span></span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://airamerica.com/politics/10-20-2009/military-ignoring-its-heroin-problem/?p=all"><span style="font-size: 10pt;"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">http://airamerica.com/politics/10-20-2009/military-ignoring-its-heroin-problem/?p=all</span></span></a><span style="font-size: 10pt;"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">; Gerald Posner, “The Taliban’s Heroin<span> </span>Ploy,” The Daily Beast, October 19, 2009, </span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-10-19/the-heroin-bomb/full/"><span style="font-family: Verdana;">http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-10-19/the-heroin-bomb/full/</span></a><span style="font-family: Verdana;">.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[61]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> <span>Douglas Valentine, <em>The Strength of the Pack: The People, Politics and Espionage Intrigues that Shaped the DEA</em> (Springfield, OR: TrineDay, 2009),</span> 171; cf. 103.</span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[62]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Gen. Mahmut Gareev, ““Afghan drug trafficking brings US $50 billion a year,” RussiaToday. August 20, 2009, </span></span><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://russiatoday.com/Top_News/2009-08-20/afghanistan-us-drug-trafficking.html"><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">http://russiatoday.com/Top_News/2009-08-20/afghanistan-us-drug-trafficking.html</span></a><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[63]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: 10pt;"> Jeremy R. Hammond, “Pakistan: General Hamid Gul on Destabilizing Pakistan,”<span> </span><em>Foreign Policy Journal</em>, August 27, 2009,<a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://axisoflogic.com/artman/publish/Article_56790.shtml">http://axisoflogic.com/artman/publish/Article_56790.shtml</a>.</span></span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><span style="font-family: Verdana;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span><span class="MsoEndnoteReference"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">[64]</span></span></span></span> <span style="font-size: 10pt;">“Occupiers involved in drug trade: Afghan minister,” IranPressTV, November 1, 2009,</span></span></span></p>
<p class="MsoEndnoteText" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-left: 0cm;" align="left"><a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=110130&amp;sectionid=351020403"><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=110130&amp;sectionid=351020403</span></a><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">.</span></p>
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<td class="bigArticleText" style="font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 14px; text-align: inherit; color: #000000; text-decoration: none; padding: 0px;" valign="middle"><em>Peter Dale Scott is a frequent contributor to Global Research.</em> <a style="color: #000080; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal;" href="http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=listByAuthor&amp;authorFirst=Peter%20Dale&amp;authorName=Scott"><em>Global Research Articles by Peter Dale Scott</em></a></td>
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		<title>Tarpley on the Pearl Harbor Conspiracy</title>
		<link>http://www.roadoutofbabylon.com/2009/12/tarpley-on-the-pearl-harbor-conspiracy/</link>
		<comments>http://www.roadoutofbabylon.com/2009/12/tarpley-on-the-pearl-harbor-conspiracy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Dec 2009 02:05:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Terrorism/FalseFlag]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Bankster Money Cartel]]></category>

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		<title>Confirmed: Mumbai Terrorist Handled by US Intelligence; Fits M.O. of False Flag</title>
		<link>http://www.roadoutofbabylon.com/2009/12/confirmed-mumbai-terrorist-handled-by-us-intelligence-fits-m-o-of-false-flag/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Dec 2009 23:13:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
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Mumbai suspect is US double agent, India claims
An American man charged with plotting the attacks on Mumbai was a double agent for both the United States and al-Qaeda terror group Lashkar e Taiba, Indian officials have claimed.

By Dean Nelson in New Delhi
Published: 6:22PM GMT 16 Dec 2009

David Headley, a Pakistan-born American national arrested in Chicago [...]]]></description>
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<p style="padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 1em; padding-left: 0px; font-size: 1.3em; line-height: 1.38em; color: #404040; margin: 0px;"><span style="color: #000000; line-height: normal; font-size: 10px;"></p>
<h1 style="padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; font-size: 2.8em; font-weight: bold; line-height: 1.18em; color: #666666; margin: 0px;">Mumbai suspect is US double agent, India claims</h1>
<h2 style="padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; font-size: 1.6em; font-weight: normal; line-height: 1.18em; color: #444444; margin: 0px;">An American man charged with plotting the attacks on Mumbai was a double agent for both the United States and al-Qaeda terror group Lashkar e Taiba, Indian officials have claimed.</h2>
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<p style="padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 1em; padding-left: 0px; font-size: 1.3em; line-height: 1.38em; color: #404040; margin: 0px;">By Dean Nelson in New Delhi<br />
Published: 6:22PM GMT 16 Dec 2009</p>
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<p style="padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 1em; padding-left: 0px; font-size: 1.3em; line-height: 1.38em; color: #404040; margin: 0px;">David Headley, a Pakistan-born American national arrested in Chicago in October, is alleged to have carried out reconnaissance missions in the run-up to the Mumbai attacks, in which 166 people were killed.</p>
<p style="padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 1em; padding-left: 0px; font-size: 1.3em; line-height: 1.38em; color: #404040; margin: 0px;">He is also believed to have been present in the terrorists&#8217; &#8220;control room&#8221; in Pakistan where their handlers directed the killing spree over an open telephone line.</p>
<p style="padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 1em; padding-left: 0px; font-size: 1.3em; line-height: 1.38em; color: #404040; margin: 0px;">Indian officials are desperate to question Headley but have been frustrated by American refusals to grant them access. A team of Indian investigators travelled to Washington shortly after Headley was arrested in October but soon returned after their American counterparts told them they would not be able to meet him.According to Indian officials, Headley travelled to India again in March this year, with the knowledge of American agencies who did not inform their Indian counterparts. During the trip, Headley is alleged to have collected intelligence for future terrorist attacks on civilian and military targets, including India&#8217;s National Defence College.</p>
<p style="padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 1em; padding-left: 0px; font-size: 1.3em; line-height: 1.38em; color: #404040; margin: 0px;">They want to question him about the Mumbai attacks involved Pakistan&#8217;s ISI intelligence agency in any way and the role of Indian extremists in providing logistical support.</p>
<p style="padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 1em; padding-left: 0px; font-size: 1.3em; line-height: 1.38em; color: #404040; margin: 0px;">American officials say that under US law they cannot force any person in their custody to give evidence to foreign agencies. But Indian intelligence officers have questioned why Washington is not doing more to help their own inquiry and suggested Headley&#8217;s connections with American intelligence agencies is behind the reluctance.</p>
<p style="padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 1em; padding-left: 0px; font-size: 1.3em; line-height: 1.38em; color: #404040; margin: 0px;">Headley, who was born Daood Syed Gilani and schooled in Pakistan before moving to Philadelphia with his American mother in 1977, was convicted of smuggling heroin into the United States in 1998. He served only 15 months in jail after agreeing to become an informant for the Drugs Enforcement Administration (DEA). He changed his name to David Headley in 2006.</p>
<p style="padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 1em; padding-left: 0px; font-size: 1.3em; line-height: 1.38em; color: #404040; margin: 0px;">According to Indian officials he continued to serve as a DEA informant until shortly before his arrest in October. Indian intelligence sources believe Headley may have been recruited to work for the CIA which, along with the FBI, shared intelligence with the DEA and other government agencies after the creation of the National Counter-Terrorism Centre in 2004.</p>
<p style="padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 1em; padding-left: 0px; font-size: 1.3em; line-height: 1.38em; color: #404040; margin: 0px;">B. Raman, a former senior official in India&#8217;s intelligence agency, said: &#8220;He was working for Lashkar e Taiba, taking photographs and video recordings of the [Mumbai] hotels and harbour. And he was an agent for the DEA on drugs, so in that sense he was a double agent.</p>
<p style="padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 1em; padding-left: 0px; font-size: 1.3em; line-height: 1.38em; color: #404040; margin: 0px;">&#8220;Indian officials are very keen to question him about his network, but we can&#8217;t because we might find out about any connections with the CIA or ISI. They don&#8217;t want that to happen. The Americans say &#8216;you ask us what you want us to find out and we&#8217;ll share the information&#8217;,&#8221; he added.</p>
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		<title>The Great Game: Obama Declares War on Pakistan</title>
		<link>http://www.roadoutofbabylon.com/2009/12/the-great-game-obama-declares-war-on-pakistan/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 14 Dec 2009 19:17:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[ 
Obama Declares War On Pakistan

Webster G. Tarpley
actindependent.org
December 14, 2009


















Obama declared all-out war on Pakistan during his December 1, 2009, West Point speech.







 
Obama’s West Point speech of December 1 represents far more than the obvious brutal escalation in Afghanistan — it is nothing less than a declaration of all-out war by the United States [...]]]></description>
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<h1 class="subheadlinemain" style="font-family: Georgia, 'Times New Roman', Times, serif; font-size: 18px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 2px; padding-left: 0px; font-weight: normal; line-height: 23px; margin: 0px;"><a style="color: #000000; text-decoration: none; font-weight: normal; font-family: Georgia, 'Times New Roman', Times, serif; font-size: 24.13px;" title="Permanent Link to Obama Declares War On Pakistan" rel="bookmark" href="http://www.infowars.com/obama-declares-war-on-pakistan/">Obama Declares War On Pakistan</a></h1>
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<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><strong>Webster G. Tarpley</strong><br />
actindependent.org<br />
December 14, 2009</p>
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<td class="photo-caption" style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; color: #333333; font-weight: bold; line-height: 13px;" width="400">Obama declared all-out war on Pakistan during his December 1, 2009, West Point speech.</td>
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<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Obama’s West Point speech of December 1 represents far more than the obvious brutal escalation in Afghanistan — it is nothing less than a declaration of all-out war by the United States against Pakistan. This is a brand-new war, a much wider war now targeting Pakistan, a country of 160 million people armed with nuclear weapons. In the process, Afghanistan is scheduled to be broken up. This is no longer the Bush Cheney Afghan war we have known in the past. This is something immensely bigger: the attempt to destroy the Pakistani central government in Islamabad and to sink that country into a chaos of civil war, Balkanization, subdivision and general mayhem. The chosen strategy is to massively export the Afghan civil war into Pakistan and beyond, fracturing Pakistan along ethnic lines. It is an oblique war using fourth-generation or guerrilla warfare techniques to assail a country which the United States and its associates in aggression are far too weak to attack directly. In this war, the Taliban are employed as US proxies. This aggression against Pakistan is Obama’s attempt to wage the Great Game against the hub of Central Asia and Eurasia or more generally.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><strong>US DETERRED FROM OPEN WAR BY PAKISTAN’S NUKES</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">The ongoing civil war in Afghanistan is merely a pretext, a cover story designed to provide the United States with a springboard for a geopolitical destabilization campaign in the entire region which cannot be publicly avowed. In the blunt cynical world of imperialist aggression à la Bush and Cheney, a pretext might have been manufactured to attack Pakistan directly. But Pakistan is far too large and the United States is far too weak and too bankrupt for such an undertaking. In addition, Pakistan is a nuclear power, possessing atomic bombs and medium range missiles needed to deliver them. What we are seeing is a novel case of nuclear deterrence in action. The US cannot send an invasion fleet or set up airbases nearby because Pakistani nuclear weapons might destroy them. To this extent, the efforts of Ali Bhutto and A.Q. Khan to provide Pakistan a deterrent capability have been vindicated. But the US answer is to find ways to attack Pakistan below the nuclear threshold, and even below the conventional threshold. This is where the tactic of exporting the Afghan civil war to Pakistan comes in.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">The architect of the new Pakistani civil war is US Special Forces General Stanley McChrystal, who organized the infamous network of US torture chambers in Iraq. McChrystal’s specific credential for the Pakistani civil war is his role in unleashing the Iraqi civil war of Sunnis versus Shiites by creating “al Qaeda in Iraq” under the infamous and now departed double agent Zarkawi. If Iraqi society as a whole had lined up against the US invaders, the occupiers would have soon been driven out. The counter-gang known as “Al Qaeda in Iraq” avoided that possibility by killing Shiites, and thus calling forth massive retaliation in the form of a civil war. These tactics are drawn from the work of British General Frank Kitson, who wrote about them in his book <em>Low Intensity Warfare</em>. If the United States possesses a modern analog to Heinrich Himmler of the SS, it is surely General McChrystal, Obama’s hand-picked choice. McChrystal’s superior, Gen Petraeus, wants to be the new Field Marshal von Hindenburg – in other words, he wants to be the next US president.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">The vulnerability of Pakistan which the US and its NATO associates are seeking to exploit can best be understood using a map of the prevalent ethnic groups of Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, and India. Most maps show only political borders which date back to the time of British imperialism, and therefore fail to reflect the principal ethnic groups of the region. For the purposes of this analysis, we must start by recognizing a number of groups. First is the Pashtun people, located mainly in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Then we have the Baluchis, located primarily in Pakistan and Iran. The Punjabis inhabit Pakistan, as do the Sindhis. The Bhutto family came from Sind.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><strong>PASHTUNISTAN</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">The US and NATO strategy begins with the Pashtuns, the ethnic group from which the so-called Taliban are largely drawn. The Pashtuns represent a substantial portion of the population of Afghanistan, but here they are alienated from the central government under President Karzai in Kabul, even though the US puppet Karzai passes for a Pashtun himself. The issue involves the Afghan National Army, which was created by the United States after the 2001 invasion. The Afghan officer corps are largely Tajiks drawn from the Northern Alliance that allied with the United States against the Pashtun Talibans. The Tajiks speak Dari, sometimes known as eastern Persian. Other Afghan officers come from the Hazara people. The important thing is that the Pashtuns feel shut out.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">The US strategy can best be understood as a deliberate effort at persecuting, harassing, antagonizing, strafing, repressing, and murdering the Pashtuns. The additional 40,000 US and NATO forces which Obama demands for Afghanistan will concentrate in Helmand province and other areas where the Pashtuns are in the majority. The net effect will be to increase the rebellion of the fiercely independent Pashtuns against Kabul and the foreign occupation, and at the same time to push many of these newly radicalized mujaheddin fighters across the border into Pakistan, where they can wage war against the central government in Islamabad. US aid will flow directly to war lords and drug lords, increasing the centrifugal tendencies.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">On the Pakistani side, the Pashtuns are also alienated from the central government. Islamabad and the army are seen by them as too much the creatures of the Punjabis, with some input from the Sindhis. On the Pakistani side of the Pashtun territory, US operations include wholesale assassinations from unmanned aerial vehicles or drones, murders by CIA and reportedly Blackwater snipers, plus blind terrorist massacres like the recent ones in Peshawar which the Pakistani Taliban are blaming on Blackwater, acting as a subcontractor of the CIA. These actions are intolerable and humiliating for a proud sovereign state. Every time the Pashtuns are clobbered, they blame the Punjabis in Islamabad for the dirty deals with the US that allow this to happen. The most immediate goal of Obama’s Afghan-Pakistan escalation is therefore to promote a general secessionist uprising of the entire Pashtun people under Taliban auspices, which would already have the effect of destroying the national unity of both Kabul and Islamabad.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><strong>BALUCHISTAN</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">The other ethnic group which the Obama strategy seeks to goad into insurrection and secession is the Baluchis. The Baluchis have their own grievances against the Iranian central government in Tehran, which they see as being dominated by Persians. An integral part of the new Obama policy is to expand the deadly flights of the CIA Predators and other assassination drones into Baluchistan. One pretext for this is the report, peddled for example by Michael Ware of CNN, that Osama bin Laden and his MI-6 sidekick Zawahiri are both holed up in the Baluchi city of Quetta, where they operate as the kingpins of the so-called “Quetta Shura.” Blackwater teams cannot be far behind. In Iranian Baluchistan, the CIA is funding the murderous Jundullah organization, which was recently denounced by Teheran for the murder of a number of top officials of the Iranian Pasdaran Revolutionary guards. The rebellion of Baluchistan would smash the national unity of both Pakistan and Iran, thus helping to destroy two of the leading targets of US policy.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><strong>OBAMA’S RUBE GOLDBERG STRATEGY</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Even Chris Matthews of MSNBC, normally a devoted acolyte of Obama, pointed out that the US strategy as announced at West Point very much resembles a Rube Goldberg contraption. (In the real world, “al Qaeda” is of course the CIA’s own Arab and terrorist legion.) In the world of official US myth, the enemy is supposed to be “Al Qaeda.” But, even according to the US government, there are precious few “Al Qaeda” fighters left in Afghanistan. Why then, asked Matthews, concentrate US forces in Afghanistan where “Al Qaeda” is not, rather than in Pakistan where “Al Qaeda” is now alleged to be?</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">One elected official who has criticized this incongruous mismatch is Democratic Senator Russ Feingold of Wisconsin, who said in a television interview that ‘Pakistan, in the border region near Afghanistan, is perhaps the epicenter [of global terrorism], although al Qaida is operating all over the world, in Yemen, in Somalia, in northern Africa, affiliates in Southeast Asia. Why would we build up 100,000 or more troops in parts of Afghanistan included that are not even near the border? You know, this buildup is in Helmand Province. That’s not next door to Waziristan. So I’m wondering, what exactly is this strategy, given the fact that we have seen that there is a minimal presence of Al Qaida in Afghanistan, but a significant presence in Pakistan? It just defies common sense that a huge boots on the ground presence in a place where these people are not is the right strategy. It doesn’t make any sense to me.’ Indeed. ‘The Wisconsin Democrat also warned that U.S. policy in Afghanistan could actually push terrorists and extremists into Pakistan and, as a consequence, further destabilize the region: “You know, I asked the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mullen, and Mr. Holbrooke, our envoy over there, a while ago, you know, is there a risk that if we build up troops in Afghanistan, that will push more extremists into Pakistan?” he told ABC. “They couldn’t deny it, and this week, Prime Minister Gilani of Pakistan specifically said that his concern about the buildup is that it will drive more extremists into Pakistan, so I think it’s just the opposite, that this boots-on-the-ground approach alienates the Afghan population and specifically encourages the Taliban to further coalesce with Al Qaida, which is the complete opposite of our national security interest.”’<a name="sdfootnote1anc"></a> Of course, this is all intentional and motivated by US imperialist <em>raison d’état</em>. .</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><strong>MALICK: “DID OBAMA DECLARE WAR ON PAKISTAN?”</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Obama’s speech did everything possible to blur the distinction between Afghanistan and Pakistan, which are after all two sovereign states and both members of the United Nations in their own right. Ibrahim Sajid Malick, US correspondent for Samaa TV, one of the largest Pakistan television networks, called attention to this ploy: ‘Speaking to a hall full of cadets at the US Military Academy of West Point, President Barack Obama almost seemed like he might be declaring war on Pakistan. Every time he mentioned Afghanistan, Pakistan preceded mention…. Sitting at the back benches of the hall at one point I almost jumped out of my chair when he said: “the stakes are even higher within a nuclear-armed Pakistan, because we know that al Qaeda and other extremists seek nuclear weapons, and we have every reason to believe that they would use them.” I was shocked because a succession of American officials recently confirmed that the Pakistani arsenal is secure.’<a name="sdfootnote2anc"></a> This article is entitled “<a style="color: #003366; text-decoration: underline;" href="http://ibrahimsajidmalick.com/did-obama-declare-war-on-pakistan/484/">Did Obama Declare War On Pakistan?</a>”, and we can chalk the question mark up to diplomatic discretion. During congressional hearings involving General McChrystal and US Ambassador Eikenberry, Afghanistan and Pakistan were simply fused into one sinister entity known as “Afpak” or even “Afpakia.”</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">
<p>In the summer of 2007, Obama, coached by Zbigniew Brzezinski and other controllers, was the originator of the unilateral US policy of using Predator drones for political assassinations inside Pakistan. This assassination policy is now being massively escalated along with the troop strength: “Two weeks ago in<span id="apture_prvw1" class="aptureLink " style="display: inline !important; float: none !important; -webkit-border-top-right-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-top-left-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-bottom-left-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-bottom-right-radius: 4px 4px; cursor: pointer !important; padding: 0px !important; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;"><span class="aptureLinkIcon" style="display: inline !important; padding-top: 0px !important; padding-right: 0px !important; padding-bottom: 0px !important; padding-left: 11px !important; float: none !important; background-image: url(http://static.apture.com/media/imgs/link_icons.gif?v12) !important; background-repeat: no-repeat !important; background-position: 100% -1049px; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;"> </span><a class="aptureLink snap_noshots" style="color: #003366; text-decoration: underline; display: inline !important; float: none !important; padding: 0px !important; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;" href="http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/news/international/countriesandterritories/pakistan/index.html">Pakistan</a></span>, <span id="apture_prvw2" class="aptureLink " style="display: inline !important; float: none !important; -webkit-border-top-right-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-top-left-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-bottom-left-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-bottom-right-radius: 4px 4px; cursor: pointer !important; padding: 0px !important; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;"><span class="aptureLinkIcon" style="display: inline !important; padding-top: 0px !important; padding-right: 0px !important; padding-bottom: 0px !important; padding-left: 11px !important; float: none !important; background-image: url(http://static.apture.com/media/imgs/link_icons.gif?v12) !important; background-repeat: no-repeat !important; background-position: 100% -1049px; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;"> </span><a class="aptureLink snap_noshots" style="color: #003366; text-decoration: underline; display: inline !important; float: none !important; padding: 0px !important; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;" href="http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/organizations/c/central_intelligence_agency/index.html">Central Intelligence Agency</a></span> sharpshooters killed eight people suspected of being militants of the<span id="apture_prvw3" class="aptureLink " style="display: inline !important; float: none !important; -webkit-border-top-right-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-top-left-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-bottom-left-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-bottom-right-radius: 4px 4px; cursor: pointer !important; padding: 0px !important; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;"><span class="aptureLinkIcon" style="display: inline !important; padding-top: 0px !important; padding-right: 0px !important; padding-bottom: 0px !important; padding-left: 11px !important; float: none !important; background-image: url(http://static.apture.com/media/imgs/link_icons.gif?v12) !important; background-repeat: no-repeat !important; background-position: 100% -1049px; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;"> </span><a class="aptureLink snap_noshots" style="color: #003366; text-decoration: underline; display: inline !important; float: none !important; padding: 0px !important; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;" href="http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/organizations/t/taliban/index.html">Taliban</a></span> and <span id="apture_prvw4" class="aptureLink " style="display: inline !important; float: none !important; -webkit-border-top-right-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-top-left-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-bottom-left-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-bottom-right-radius: 4px 4px; cursor: pointer !important; padding: 0px !important; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;"><span class="aptureLinkIcon" style="display: inline !important; padding-top: 0px !important; padding-right: 0px !important; padding-bottom: 0px !important; padding-left: 11px !important; float: none !important; background-image: url(http://static.apture.com/media/imgs/link_icons.gif?v12) !important; background-repeat: no-repeat !important; background-position: 100% -1049px; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;"> </span><a class="aptureLink snap_noshots" style="color: #003366; text-decoration: underline; display: inline !important; float: none !important; padding: 0px !important; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;" href="http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/organizations/a/al_qaeda/index.html">Al Qaeda</a></span>, and wounded two others in a compound that was said to be used for terrorist training…. The White House has authorized an expansion of the C.I.A.’s <span id="apture_prvw5" class="aptureLink " style="display: inline !important; float: none !important; -webkit-border-top-right-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-top-left-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-bottom-left-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-bottom-right-radius: 4px 4px; cursor: pointer !important; padding: 0px !important; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;"><span class="aptureLinkIcon" style="display: inline !important; padding-top: 0px !important; padding-right: 0px !important; padding-bottom: 0px !important; padding-left: 11px !important; float: none !important; background-image: url(http://static.apture.com/media/imgs/link_icons.gif?v12) !important; background-repeat: no-repeat !important; background-position: 100% -1049px; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;"> </span><a class="aptureLink snap_noshots" style="color: #003366; text-decoration: underline; display: inline !important; float: none !important; padding: 0px !important; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;" href="http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/subjects/u/unmanned_aerial_vehicles/index.html">drone</a></span> program in Pakistan’s lawless tribal areas, officials said this week, to parallel the president’s decision…to send 30,000 more troops to <span id="apture_prvw6" class="aptureLink " style="display: inline !important; float: none !important; -webkit-border-top-right-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-top-left-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-bottom-left-radius: 4px 4px; -webkit-border-bottom-right-radius: 4px 4px; cursor: pointer !important; padding: 0px !important; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;"><span class="aptureLinkIcon" style="display: inline !important; padding-top: 0px !important; padding-right: 0px !important; padding-bottom: 0px !important; padding-left: 11px !important; float: none !important; background-image: url(http://static.apture.com/media/imgs/link_icons.gif?v12) !important; background-repeat: no-repeat !important; background-position: 100% -1049px; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;"> </span><a class="aptureLink snap_noshots" style="color: #003366; text-decoration: underline; display: inline !important; float: none !important; padding: 0px !important; margin: 0px !important; border: 0px !important initial !important initial !important;" href="http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/news/international/countriesandterritories/afghanistan/index.html">Afghanistan</a></span>. American officials are talking with Pakistan about the possibility of striking in Baluchistan for the first time — a controversial move since it is outside the tribal areas — because that is where Afghan Taliban leaders are believed to hide.”<a name="sdfootnote3anc"></a> The US is now training more Predator operators than combat pilots.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><strong>BLACKWATER ACCUSED IN PESHAWAR MASSACRE OF WOMEN AND CHILDREN</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">The CIA, the Pentagon, and their various contractors among the private military firms are now on a murder spree across Pakistan, attacking peaceful villages and wedding parties, among other targets. Blackwater, now calling itself Xe Services and Total Intelligence Solutions, is heavily involved: <span lang="en" xml:lang="en">‘At a covert forward operating base run by the US Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) in the Pakistani port city of Karachi, members of an elite division of Blackwater are at the center of a secret program in which they plan targeted assassinations of suspected Taliban and Al Qaeda operatives, “snatch and grabs” of high-value targets and other sensitive action inside and outside Pakistan, an investigation by </span><span lang="en" xml:lang="en"><em>The Nation</em></span><span lang="en" xml:lang="en"> has found. The Blackwater operatives also assist in gathering intelligence and help direct a secret US military drone bombing campaign that runs parallel to the well-documented CIA predator strikes, according to a well-placed source within the US military intelligence apparatus.’</span><span lang="en" xml:lang="en"> <a name="sdfootnote4anc"></a></span></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">As shocking as Scahill’s report is, it must nevertheless be viewed as a limited hangout, since there is no mention of the persistent charges that a large part of the deadly bombings in Peshawar and other Pakistani cities are being carried out by Blackwater, as this news item suggests: “ISLAMABAD Oct. 29 (Xinhua) — Chief of Taliban movement in Pakistan Hakimullah Mehsud has blamed the controversial American private firm Blackwater for the bomb blast in Peshawar which killed 108 people, local news agency NNI reported Thursday.”<a name="sdfootnote5anc"></a> This was blind terrorism designed for maximum slaughter, especially among women and children.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><strong>US ALSO AT WAR WITH UZBEKISTAN?</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Scahill’s report also suggests that US black ops have reached into Uzbekistan, a post-Soviet country of 25 million which borders Afghanistan to the north: ‘In addition to planning drone strikes and operations against suspected Al Qaeda and Taliban forces in Pakistan for both JSOC and the CIA, the Blackwater team in Karachi also helps plan missions for JSOC inside Uzbekistan against the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, according to the military intelligence source. Blackwater does not actually carry out the operations, he said, which are executed on the ground by JSOC forces. “That piqued my curiosity and really worries me because I don’t know if you noticed but I was never told we are at war with Uzbekistan,” he said. “So, did I miss something, did Rumsfeld come back into power?”’ <a name="sdfootnote6anc"></a> Such are the ways of hope and change.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">The role of US intelligence in fomenting the Baluchistan rebellion for the purpose of breaking Pakistan apart is also confirmed by Professor Chossudovsky: ‘Already in 2005, a report by the US National Intelligence Council and the CIA forecast a “Yugoslav-like fate” for Pakistan “in a decade with the country riven by civil war, bloodshed and inter-provincial rivalries, as seen recently in Baluchistan.” (<em>Energy Compass</em>, 2 March 2005). According to the NIC-CIA, Pakistan is slated to become a “failed state” by 2015, “as it would be affected by civil war, complete Talibanization and struggle for control of its nuclear weapons”. (Quoted by former Pakistan High Commissioner to UK, Wajid Shamsul Hasan,<em>Times of India</em>, 13 February 2005)…. Washington favors the creation of a “Greater Baluchistan” which would integrate the Baluch areas of Pakistan with those of Iran and possibly the Southern tip of Afghanistan, thereby leading to a process of political fracturing in both Iran and Pakistan.’<a name="sdfootnote7anc"></a> The Iranians, for their part, are adamant that the US is committing acts of war on their territory in Baluchistan: “TEHRAN, Oct. 29 (Xinhua) — Iran’s Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani said …that there are some concrete evidences showing U.S. involvement in recent deadly bomb explosions in the country’s Sistan-Baluchistan province, the official IRNA news agency reported. …. The deadly suicide attack by Sunni rebel group Jundallah (God’s soldiers) occurred on Oct. 18 in Iran’s Sistan-Baluchistan province near the border with Pakistan when the local officials were preparing a ceremony in which the local tribal leaders were to meet the military commanders of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC).<a name="sdfootnote8anc"></a></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><strong>US GOAL: CUT THE PAKISTAN ENERGY CORRIDOR BETWEEN IRAN, CHINA</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Why would the United States be so obsessed with the breakup of Pakistan? One reason is that Pakistan is traditionally a strategic ally and economic partner of China, a country which the US and British are determined to oppose and contain on the world stage. Specifically, Pakistan could function as an energy corridor linking the oil fields of Iran and possibly even Iraq with the Chinese market by means of a pipeline that would cross the Himalayas above Kashmir. This is the so-called “Pipelinestan” issue. This would give China a guaranteed land-based oil supply not subject to Anglo-American naval superiority, while also cutting out the 12,000 mile tanker route around the southern rim of Asia. As a recent news report points out: ‘Beijing has been pressuring Tehran for China’s participation in the pipeline project and Islamabad, while willing to sign a bilateral agreement with Iran, has also welcomed China’s participation. According to an estimate, such a pipeline would result in Pakistan getting $200 million to $500 million annually in transit fees alone. China and Pakistan are already working on a proposal for laying a trans-Himalayan pipeline to carry Middle Eastern crude oil to western China. Pakistan provides China the shortest possible route to import oil from the Gulf countries…. The pipeline, which would run from the southern Pakistan port of Gwadar and follow the Karakoram highway, would be partly financed by Beijing. The Chinese are also building a refinery at Gwadar. Imports using the pipeline would allow Beijing to reduce the portion of its oil shipped through the narrow and unsafe Strait of Malacca, which at present carries up to 80% of its oil imports. Islamabad also plans to extend a railway track to China to connect it to Gwadar. The port is also considered the likely terminus of proposed multibillion-dollar gas pipelines reaching from the South Pars fields in Iran or from Qatar, and from the Daulatabad fields in Turkmenistan for export to world markets. Syed Fazl-e-Haider, “Pakistan, Iran sign gas pipeline deal,” <em>Asia Times</em>, 27 May 2009.<a name="sdfootnote9anc"></a> This is the normal, peaceful economic progress and cooperation which the Anglo-Americans are hell-bent on stopping.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Oil and natural gas pipelines from Iran across Pakistan and into China would carry energy resources into the Middle Kingdom, and would also serve as conveyor belts for Chinese economic influence into the Middle East. This would make Anglo-American dominion increasingly tenuous in a part of the world which London and Washington have traditionally sought to control as part of their overall strategy of world domination.</p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><span lang="en" xml:lang="en">US domestic propaganda is already portraying Pakistan as the new home </span><span lang="en" xml:lang="en">base of terrorism. The four pathetic patsies going on trial for an alleged plot to bomb a synagogue in the Riverdale neighborhood of the Bronx in New York City had been carefully sheep-dipped to associate them with the shadowy and suspicious Jaish-e-Mohammad, allegedly a Pakistani terrorist group. The same goes for the five Moslems from Northern Virginia who have just been arrested near Lahore in Pakistan.</span></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><strong>INDIA AND IRAN</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><span lang="en" xml:lang="en">As far as the neighboring states are concerned, India </span><span lang="en" xml:lang="en">under the unfortunate Manmohan Singh seems to be accepting the role of continental dagger against Pakistan and China on behalf of the US and the British. This is a recipe for a colossal tragedy. India should rather make permanent peace with Pakistan by vacating the Vale of Kashmir, where 95% of the population is Moslem and would like to join Pakistan. Without a solution to this issue, there will be no peace on the subcontinent.</span></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><span lang="en" xml:lang="en">Regarding Iran, George Friedman, the head of the Stratfor outlet of the US intelligence community recently told Russia Today that the great novelty of the next decade will be an alliance of the United States with Iran directed against Russia. In that scenario, Iran would cut off oil to China altogether. That is the essence of the Brzezinski strategy. It is urgent that the antiwar movement in the United States regroup and begin a new mobilization against the cynical hypocrisy of Obama’s war and escalation policy, which suprasses even the war crimes of the Bush-Cheny neocons. In this new phase of the Great Game, the stakes are incalculable.</span></p>
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><a name="sdfootnote1sym"></a> <a style="color: #003366; text-decoration: underline;" href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/12/06/feingold-why-surge-where_n_381729.html" target="_blank">http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/12/06/feingold-why-surge-where_n_381729.html</a></p>
<div id="sdfootnote2">
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><a name="sdfootnote2sym"></a> Ibrahim Sajid Malick, “<a style="color: #003366; text-decoration: underline;" href="http://ibrahimsajidmalick.com/did-obama-declare-war-on-pakistan/484/">Did Obama Declare War On Pakistan?</a>,” Pakistan for Pakistanis Blog, 2 December 2009. http://ibrahimsajidmalick.com/did-Obama-declare-war-on-pakistan/484/</p>
</div>
<div id="sdfootnote3">
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><a name="sdfootnote3sym"></a> Scott Shane, “C.I.A. to Expand Use of Drones in Pakistan,” <em>New York Times</em>, December 3, 2009. See also David E. Sanger and Eric Schmitt, “Between the Lines, an Expansion in Pakistan,” <em>New York Times</em>, 1 December 2009.</p>
</div>
<div id="sdfootnote4">
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><a name="sdfootnote4sym"></a> <a style="color: #003366; text-decoration: underline;" href="http://www.thenation.com/directory/bios/jeremy_scahill">Jeremy Scahill</a>, “The Secret US War in Pakistan,” <em>The Nation</em>, November 23, 2009</p>
</div>
<div id="sdfootnote5">
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><a name="sdfootnote5sym"></a> “Taliban in Pakistan blame U.S. Blackwater for deadly blast,” Xinhua News Agency, 29 October 2009, http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-10/29/content_12358907.htm</p>
</div>
<div id="sdfootnote6">
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><a name="sdfootnote6sym"></a> <a style="color: #003366; text-decoration: underline;" href="http://www.thenation.com/directory/bios/jeremy_scahill">Jeremy Scahill</a>, “The Secret US War in Pakistan,” <em>The Nation</em>, November 23, 2009</p>
</div>
<div id="sdfootnote7">
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><a name="sdfootnote7sym"></a> Michel Chossudovsky, <a style="color: #003366; text-decoration: underline;" href="http://svnlsenetter.wordpress.com/2007/12/31/the-destabilization-of-pakistan/">The Destabilization of Pakistan</a>, <a style="color: #003366; text-decoration: underline;" href="http://www.globalresearch.ca/">Global Research</a>, December 30, 2007</p>
</div>
<div id="sdfootnote8">
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><a name="sdfootnote8sym"></a> “Iran says having evidences of U.S. involvement in suicide bomb attacks,” Xinhua, 29 October 2009.</p>
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<div id="sdfootnote9">
<p style="margin-top: 12px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;"><a name="sdfootnote9sym"></a> http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/KE27Df03.html</p>
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		<title>Hasan Connected to Top Level DHS Officials</title>
		<link>http://www.roadoutofbabylon.com/2009/11/hasan-connected-to-top-level-dhs-officials/</link>
		<comments>http://www.roadoutofbabylon.com/2009/11/hasan-connected-to-top-level-dhs-officials/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 15 Nov 2009 08:31:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Terrorism/FalseFlag]]></category>

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Special Report: TERRORIST HASAN WAS BUSH HOMELAND SECURITY ADVISOR

FT. HOOD TERRORIST ON BUSH PRESTIGIOUS HOMELAND SECURITY TRANSITION TEAM
HASAN TIES TO GOP SUBJECT TO MASSIVE DISINFORMATION CAMPAIGN AND COVERUP
By Gordon Duff STAFF WRITER/Senior Editor
&#8220;Lucy, you got some splainin&#8217; to do.&#8221;
The task force at George Washington University designated with establishing transitional procedures in the Global War on [...]]]></description>
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<div class="post"><span><span>Special Report: TERRORIST HASAN WAS BUSH HOMELAND SECURITY ADVISOR</span></span><br />
<img src="http://www.veteranstoday.com/story_images2/screenhunter_45_nov._09_19.12_150.jpg" border="0" alt="" /></p>
<p><strong>FT. HOOD TERRORIST ON BUSH PRESTIGIOUS HOMELAND SECURITY TRANSITION TEAM</p>
<p>HASAN TIES TO GOP SUBJECT TO MASSIVE DISINFORMATION CAMPAIGN AND COVERUP</strong></p>
<p>By Gordon Duff STAFF WRITER/Senior Editor</p>
<p>&#8220;Lucy, you got some splainin&#8217; to do.&#8221;</p>
<p>The task force at George Washington University designated with establishing transitional procedures in the Global War on Terror included Major Hasan, mass murder and terrorist, and, as we now learn, long time terrorist suspect.  Where do we start?  Do we wonder why our troops have a psychiatrist who is not only a potential terrorist but known to be extremely mentally unbalanced?  Who, in the Bush Administration chose Hasan and helped him pass America&#8217;s highest security clearances?</p>
<p>Do any of us wonder why President Bush would have a terrorist helping with his transitional policy?  This put Hasan, under investigation for ties to Al Qaeda, at the heart of our government&#8217;s counter-terrorist planning organization with full daily access to nearly all major leaders in Homeland Security, Defense, the FBI, CIA, NSA and other key agencies.  He was one of them, along with representatives of conservative &#8220;think tanks&#8221; that advised the Bush Administration on a daily basis.  Was he there because he reminded them of an Islamic version of Dick Cheney?  Please, someone, let&#8217;s hear an explanation for this.</p>
<p>Below is a cutout from the membership roster of those advising the Bush Administration.  You will note Hasan&#8217;s name among some of the best known security experts in America.  We were told he was an Army psychiatrist with severe psychological problems who belonged to a mosque run by terrorists.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.veteranstoday.com/story_images2/screenhunter_31_nov._09_16.48_640.jpg" border="0" alt="" /></p>
<p>Hasan served with these individuals.  Why was he here?</p>
<p>*<br />
Richard V. Allen Former National Security Advisor<br />
*<br />
Stephen E. Flynn Ira A. Lipman Senior Fellow for Counterterrorism &amp; National Security Studies Council on Foreign Relations<br />
*<br />
Charles B. Curtis President &amp; Chief Operating Officer Nuclear Threat Initiative<br />
*<br />
Judge William H.Webster Former Director of Central Intelligence and Former Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation<br />
*<br />
James Lee Witt Former Director Federal Emergency Management Agency<br />
*<br />
R. James Woolsey,  Former Director Central Intelligence Agency<br />
*<br />
Edwin Meese, III Former U.S. Attorney General<br />
*<br />
General Edward &#8220;Shy&#8221; Meyer Former Chief of Staff U.S. Army<br />
*<br />
General Edward L. Rowny Former Ambassador and Lt. General USA (Ret.)<br />
*<br />
Judge William S. Sessions Former Director Federal Bureau of Investigation<br />
*<br />
Bobbie Greene Kilberg Member President&#8217;s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology<br />
*<br />
E. Floyd Kvamme Former Co-Chair President&#8217;s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology<br />
*<br />
Senator Connie Mack (R-FL) Former United States Senator, Florida<br />
*<br />
Secretary John O. Marsh, Jr. (D-VA) Former Secretary of the Army Former U.S. Congressman<br />
*<br />
and many others<br />
*<br />
Major Hasan was briefed by these individuals:<br />
*<br />
Michael Alexander, Majority Staff Director, Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate<br />
*<br />
John Cohen, Senior Advisor, Office of the Program Manager for the Information Sharing Environment , Office of the Director of National Intelligence<br />
*<br />
Rosaline Cohen , Chief Counsel, Committee on Homeland Security, U.S. House of Representatives<br />
*<br />
Beth Grossman, Senior Counsel, Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate<br />
*<br />
Alethea Long-Green, Program Area Director, National Academy of Public Administration<br />
*<br />
Mark Lowenthal, President and CEO of the Intelligence &amp; Security Academy, LLC, Former Assistant Director of Central Intelligence for Analysis and Production<br />
*<br />
Monica Schoch-Spana, Senior Associate, Center for Biosecurity, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) and Assistant Professor in the School of Medicine Division of Infectious Diseases<br />
*<br />
Fran Townsend, Former Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism</p>
<p><img src="http://www.veteranstoday.com/story_images2/screenhunter_29_nov._09_16.47_150.jpg" border="0" alt="" /><br />
The question we ask, is why was a simple low ranking military officer with a disasterous career, horrible security baggage and a Palestinian background placed at the center of the decision making apparatus of the Bush presidency?</p>
<p>The entire text of the procedings report and full membership are listed below.  Hasan&#8217;s name stands out like a rapper at a Klan rally.  It doesn&#8217;t take a genius to believe that Hasan had friends in high places, and that, despite every imaginable reason to see he shouldn&#8217;t even practice medicine, much less be in the American military or treat troops suffering from combat stress, he was placed among the most influential and powerful Americans.</p>
<p>One could suggest that, since Hasan was in town and had nothing to do for the few months other than to work with thousands of patients returning from Iraq and, in the process, mingle with terrorist sympathizers and prove himself to be dangerously unstable and utterly useless as a physician and psychiatrist, he might as well be included in intelligence planning at the highest levels.</p>
<p>I can see where this could make sense to some, really, I do.  After all, if you were choosing the absolute last person on Earth to include in such a group, the last person to expose to that much intelligence planning and the most dangerous individual imaginable to the safety of so many of our leaders, Hasan is a perfect choice.</p>
<p>Why did he choose to kill soldiers at Ft. Hood when so many of the top members of the Bush Administration would have been available to him at any time?  If none of this makes any sense to you, I think you are beginning to understand.</p>
<p>Who was Major Hasan?  Who was he really?<br />
<img src="http://www.veteranstoday.com/story_images2/steelegophasan_320.jpg" border="0" alt="" /><br />
SOME AREAS OF SPECULATION ABOUT MAJOR HASAN:</p>
<p>Hasan joined the Army at 18, entered and completed, not only college, but medical school and a residency in psychiatry at Walter Reed Hospital.  This is an amazing accomplishment.</p>
<p>His attendance at the above mentioned meetings based on a careful analysis of subject matter and the expertise level of everyone involved made the likelihood of a junior officer specializing in combat stress being invited unlikely.  Hasan would have to have been an intelligence asset of some kind.</p>
<p>Were this the case, as it most likely is, and taking into account that at least some of the accusations made against him are other than part of a coverup, Hasan was unstable.  Stating this about a psychiatrist is not much of a stretch.</p>
<p>His first targets were coworkers.  Were Hasan cross trained in intelligence and tasked with communicating with insurgents prior to deployment, the stress could have been enormous.  Hasan seems to have responded to having to pretend to be a terrorist by actually becoming one.</p>
<p>The more we read about his attendance at a &#8216;terrorist Mosque&#8221; and connections with Al Qaeda, the more likely our assumptions are the correct ones.  It is far more likely that a double agent would become suicidally unbalanced than for a terrorist to, not only be promoted to Major in the US Army, but to be put on a high security intelligence transition team.</p>
<p>There may have been a time when the US Army believed Major Hasan would be of enormous value to them in ways quite unrelated to practicing medicine.  The Major Hasan we now know is a terrorist.  He may not always have been so.</p>
<p>This evening, the Associated Press states:</p>
<p>&#8220;Investigators from the Fort Hood shootings say that Nidal Malik Hasan acted alone and that no evidence supports the theory that Hasan had outside help or orders about the massacre. Though in late 2008 Hasan did communicate with radical imam Anwar al-Awlaki, an American-born Yemeni who now lives overseas and has ties to terrorist groups, the messages &#8220;did not advocate violence or threaten violence.&#8221; Sources say that the communications were consistent with Hasan&#8217;s research as an Army psychologist on post-traumatic stress disorder. The FBI has launched an investigation into how it handled, or perhaps mishandled, the information it had on Hasan.&#8221;</p>
<p>In a very few hours, the truth has danced like a marionette, across one side of the stage to another.  What can we expect?  We will get an endless supply of interim stories until a commission is appointed to interview witnesses and come to a convenient conclusion that will best serve political necessity.  The same among us will be sickened by the process.</p>
<p><em>VeteransToday Senior Editor Gordon Duff is a Marine combat veteran and regular contributor on political and social issues.</em></div>
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		<title>BBC Admits Al Qaeda Never Existed</title>
		<link>http://www.roadoutofbabylon.com/2009/08/bbc-admits-al-qaeda-never-existed/</link>
		<comments>http://www.roadoutofbabylon.com/2009/08/bbc-admits-al-qaeda-never-existed/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 07 Aug 2009 23:30:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Terrorism/FalseFlag]]></category>

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