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Obama's Mission Accomplished Moment? Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=6396"><span class="small">Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch</span></a>   
Sunday, 15 January 2012 11:16

Engelhardt writes: "When it came to rolling out a new 10-year plan for the future of the US military, the leaks to the media began early and the message was clear. One man is in charge of your future safety and security. His name is Barack Obama."

President Obama speaks to US troops at Fort Bragg, NC, 12/14/11. (photo: Doug Mills/NYT)
President Obama speaks to US troops at Fort Bragg, NC, 12/14/11. (photo: Doug Mills/NYT)



Obama's Mission Accomplished Moment?

By Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch

15 January 12

 

ere's the ad for this moment in Washington (as I imagine it): Militarized superpower adrift and anxious in alien world. Needs advice. Will pay. Pls respond qkly. PO Box 1776-2012, Washington, DC.

Here's the way it actually went down in Washington last week: a triumphant performance by a commander-in-chief who wants you to know that he's at the top of his game.

When it came to rolling out a new 10-year plan for the future of the U.S. military, the leaks to the media began early and the message was clear. One man is in charge of your future safety and security. His name is Barack Obama. And - not to worry - he has things in hand.

Unlike the typical president, so the reports went, he held six (count 'em: six!) meetings with top Pentagon officials, the Joint Chiefs, the service heads, and his military commanders to plan out the next decade of American war making. And he was no civilian bystander at those meetings either. On a planet where no other power has more than two aircraft carriers in service, he personally nixed a Pentagon suggestion that the country's aircraft carrier battle groups be reduced from 11 to 10, lest China think our power-projection capabilities were weakening in Asia.

His secretary of defense, Leon Panetta, spared no words when it came to the president's role, praising his "vision and guidance and leadership" (as would Chairman of the Joint Chiefs General Martin E. Dempsey). Panetta described Obama's involvement thusly: "[T]his has been an unprecedented process, to have the president of the United States participate in discussions involving the development of a defense strategy, and to spend time with our service chiefs and spend time with our combatant commanders to get their views."

In other words, Obama taking ownership of the rollout of "Sustaining U.S. Global Leadership: Priorities for 21st Century Defense," a 16-page document summarizing a review of America's strategic interests, defense priorities, and military spending. Its public unveiling was to reflect the steady hand of a commander-in-chief destined to be in charge of American security for years to come.

The president even made a "rare visit" to the Pentagon. There, he was hailed as the first occupant of the Oval Office ever to make comments, no less present a new "more realistic" strategic guidance document, from its press office. All of this, in turn, was billed as introducing "major change" into the country's military stance, leading to (shades of former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld) a "leaner, meaner" force, slimmed down and recalibrated for economic tough times and a global "moment of transition."

As political theater, it couldn't have been smarter. For a president, vulnerable like all Democrats to charges of national security weakness in an election year, it was a chance for great photo ops and headlines. And it left his Republican opponents (Ron Paul, of course, excepted) in the dust, sputtering, fuming, and complaining that he was "leading from behind" and "imperiling" the nation.

Even better, in an election season which has mesmerized the media, not a single reporter or pundit seemed to notice that, whatever the new Pentagon plan might mean for the U.S. military globally, it was great domestic politics for a president whose second term was in peril.

Another "Mission Accomplished" Moment?

The actual Pentagon planning document, released the day of the president's Pentagon appearance, might as well have been written in cuneiform script or hieroglyphics. Just about any military future might have been read into or out of its purposely foggy, not to say impenetrable, pages. That, too, seemed politically canny, offering the president a militarized version of have-your-cake-and-eat-it-too-ism.

While the document only referred to the Pentagon budget-cutting process that had been making headlines for weeks in the most oblique manner, the briefings offered by the president, the secretary of defense, and other top officials highlighted those "cuts": $487 billion over the next decade. It was the sort of thing that should have made any deficit hawk's heart flutter. Yet somehow - a bow to defense hawks? - the same budget, already humongous from an unprecedented 12 straight years of expansion, was, Obama assured his audience, actually slated to keep on growing.

Like a magician pulling the proverbial rabbit from the hat, the president described the situation this way: "Over the next 10 years, the growth in the defense budget will slow, but the fact of the matter is this: It will still grow, because we have global responsibilities that demand our leadership. In fact, the defense budget will still be larger than it was toward the end of the Bush administration."

This magic trick was only possible because those headlined cuts were to come largely from the Pentagon's "projected defense spending." You'll get the idea if you imagine an obese foodie announcing that he's going to "diet" by cutting back on his dreams of future feasts, even as he modestly increases his actual caloric intake.

Surrounded by Panetta, Dempsey, the Joint Chiefs, and the service secretaries, the president had so much more to offer. Those nasty, unwinnable, nation-building-style counterinsurgency wars "with large military footprints" were now a thing of the past. On them, the tide was, as he so poetically put it, receding. Yes, there would be losers - Army and Marine Corps troop strength was slated to drop by perhaps 80,000 to 100,000 in the coming decade - but weren't they already the losers of wars no one wanted?

Listening to his presentation and those to follow, you could have been pardoned for imagining that we were already practically out of Afghanistan and looking to a time when everything military would be just cool as hell. In that future, there would be nothing but neat, high-tech military operations (and war toys) to the horizon.

These would include our latest perfect weapon, the pilotless drone; nifty cyberwar-style online combat; plenty of new spy and advanced surveillance gear; and sexy shadow wars, just the thing for "environments where adversaries try to deny us access." Elite special operations forces - the secret military, cocooned inside the regular military, that took down Osama bin Laden - would be further expanded; and finally, there would be a "pivot to Asia" to confront the planet's rising superpower, China, by sea and air, leaving all those nasty Arabs and Pashtuns and their messy, ugly guerrilla insurgencies, IEDs, and suicide bombers behind.

It couldn't have sounded cheerier once the media speculation began and it offered something for just about anyone who mattered in imperial Washington. In fact, as sober as Obama looked and as business-like as his surroundings were, if you closed your eyes, you could almost imagine a flight suit and an aircraft carrier deck, for this felt eerily like his "mission accomplished" moment.

Hostilities of the old nasty sort were practically at an end and a new era of high-tech, super-secret, elite warfare was upon us. The future would be so death-of-bin-Laden-ish all the way. It would be safe, secure, and glorious in the hands of our reconfigured military and its efficiently reconfigured budget.

Military-First Imperial Realism

This particular reconfiguration also allowed the globe's last great imperial power to put a smiley face on a decade of military disasters in the Greater Middle East and - for all the clever politics of the moment - to cry uncle in its own fashion. More miraculous yet, it was doing so without giving up its global military dreams.

It was a way of saying that, if the U.S. ever gets itself out of Afghanistan, when it comes to invading and occupying another Muslim land, building hundreds of bases and an embassy the size of the Ritz, and running riot in the name of "nation-building" and democracy: never again - or not for a few decades anyway.

Consider this a form of begrudging imperial realism that managed never to leave behind that essential American stance of garrisoning the planet. In fact, in order to fly all those drones and land all those special operations units, Washington may need more, not less bases globally. And of course, those 11 carrier battle groups are themselves floating bases, massively armed American small towns at sea.

As it happens, though, we already know how this story ends and it's nothing to write home about. Yes, they're going with what's hot, especially those drones. But keep in mind that, only a few years ago, the hottest thing in town was counterinsurgency warfare and its main proponent, General David Petraeus, was being hailed as a new Alexander the Great, Napoleon, or U.S. Grant. And you know what happened there.

Now, counterinsurgency is history. The new hot ticket of the moment, that "revolutionary weapon" of our time - the drone or robotic airplane - is to fit the bill instead. Drones are, without a doubt, technologically remarkable and growing more sophisticated by the year. But air power has historically proved a poor choice if you want to accomplish anything political on the ground. It hardly matters whether those planes in the distant heavens have pilots or not, or whether they can see ants crawl from 20,000 feet and blast them away with precision.

Despite hosannas about the air war in Libya, count on one thing: air power will prove predictably inept when it comes to an American version of "revolutionary" counterterror warfare in the twenty-first century. So much for the limits of realism.

Washington-style realism assumes that we made a few mistakes, which can be rectified with the help of advanced technology and without endangering the military-industrial-crony-capitalist way of life. That's about as radical as Obama's Washington is likely to get.

When compared to the Republicans (Ron Paul aside again) storming the rhetorical barricades daily, threatening war with Iran nightly, promising to reinvade Iraq, or swearing that a military budget larger than those of the next 10 countries combined is wussiness itself, the Obama administration's approach does look like shining realism. Up against this planet as it actually is today, its military-first policies look like wishful thinking.

What Drones Can't Do

Climate-change advocates sometimes say that we're on a new planet. (Bill McKibben calls it "Eaarth," with that ungainly extra "a" to signify an ungainly place that used to be comfy enough for humanity.) It is, they say, a planet under pressure and destabilizing in all sorts of barely imagined ways.

Here's the strange thing, though. Set aside climate change, and to the passing, modestly apocalyptic eye, this planet still looks as if it were destabilizing. Your three economic powerhouses - the European Union, China, and the United States - are all teetering at the edge of interrelated financial crises. The EU seems to be literally destabilizing. It's now perfectly reasonable to suggest that the present Eurozone may, within years, be Eurozones (or worse). Who knows when European banks, up to their elbows in bad debt, will start to tumble or whole countries like Greece go down (whatever that may mean)?

At the same time, the Chinese, with the hottest economy on the planet, have a housing bubble, which may already be bursting. (Americans should have at least a few passing memories of just what kinds of troubles a popped housing bubble can bring.) And for all we know, the U.S. economy, despite recent headlines about growing consumer confidence and an unemployment rate dropping to 8.5%, may be on life support.

As for the rest of the world, it looks questionable as well. The powerhouse Indian economy, like the Brazilian one, is slowing down. Whatever the glories of the Arab Spring, the Middle East is now in tumult and shows no signs of righting itself economically or politically any time soon. And don't forget the Obama administration's attempt to ratchet up sanctions on Iranian oil. If things go wrong, that might end up sending energy prices right through the roof and blowing back on the global economy in painful ways. With the major economies of the globe balancing on a pin, the possibility of a spike in those prices thanks to any future U.S./Iran/Israeli crisis should be terrifying.

The globalization types of the 1990s used to sing hymns to the way this planet was morphing into a single economic creature. It's worth keeping in mind that it remains so in bad times. This year could, of course, be another bumble-through year of protest and tumult, or it could be something much worse. And don't think that I - a non-economist of the first order - am alone in such fears. The new head of the International Monetary Fund, Christine Lagarde, has been traveling the planet recently making Jeremiah sound like an optimist, suggesting that we could, in fact, be at the edge of another global Great Depression.

But know this: you can buy drones till they're coming out your ears and they won't help keep Greece afloat for an extra second. Expand special operations forces to your heart's content and you still can't send them into those failing European banks. Take over cyberspace or outer space and you won't prevent a Chinese housing bubble from bursting. None of the crucial problems on this planet are, in fact, amenable to military solutions, not even by a country willing to pour its treasure into previously unheard of military and national security expenditures.

Over the years, "the perfect storm" came to be a perfectly overused cliché, which is why you don't see it much any more. But it might be worth dusting off and keeping in reserve this year and next - just in case. After all, when any situation destabilizes, all bets are off, including for a president having his mission accomplished moment. (Just ask John McCain what happened to his 2008 presidential bid when the economy suddenly began to melt down.)

In such a situation, the sort of military-first policy the president has made his own couldn't be more useless. Maybe it's time to take out a little insurance. Just not with AIG.

Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of the American Empire Project and the author of The American Way of War: How Bush's Wars Became Obama's as well as The End of Victory Culture, runs the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com. His latest book, The United States of Fear (Haymarket Books), has just been published.

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What the GOP Doesn't Want to Talk About Print
Sunday, 15 January 2012 11:13

The New York Times begins: "The more President Obama talks about narrowing that gap, the more his popularity ratings have risen while those of Congress plummet. Two-thirds of Americans now say there is a strong conflict between the rich and the poor, according to a Pew survey released last week, making it the greatest source of tension in American society."

File photo, Newt Gingrich, 09/22/08. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
File photo, Newt Gingrich, 09/22/08. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)



What the GOP Doesn't Want to Talk About

By The New York Times | Editorial

15 January 12

 

ver since Newt Gingrich and Rick Perry started criticizing Mitt Romney's actions at Bain Capital - and talking about the thousands of people laid off as a result of Bain's investments - party leaders have essentially told them to shut up. That response is a pretty good indication of how deeply party elders fear the issue of economic inequality in the campaign to come.

"What the hell are you doing, Newt?" Rudolph Giuliani asked Thursday on Fox News. "This is what Saul Alinsky taught Barack Obama, and what you're saying is part of the reason we're in so much trouble right now."

Mr. Giuliani has one thing right: Republicans are indeed in growing trouble as more voters begin to realize how much the party's policies - dismantling regulations, slashing taxes for the rich, weakening unions - have contributed to inequality and the yawning distance between the middle class and the top end.

The more President Obama talks about narrowing that gap, the more his popularity ratings have risen while those of Congress plummet. Two-thirds of Americans now say there is a strong conflict between the rich and the poor, according to a Pew survey released last week, making it the greatest source of tension in American society.

That makes Mr. Romney and his party vulnerable, as he clearly knows. He said on Wednesday that issues of wealth distribution should be discussed only "in quiet rooms." And he accused the president of using an "envy-oriented, attack-oriented" approach, "entirely inconsistent with the concept of one nation under God."

Mr. Romney's image of a country where workers have nothing but admiration for benevolent, job-creating capitalists (and no one is so impolite as to mention jobs destroyed) bears very little relationship to reality. But his suggestion that it is un-American to talk about rising populist resentment is self-serving and hypocritical. Republicans, in particular, have eagerly stoked such resentments against minorities and the poor.

That was the essence of the "Southern strategy" that Republicans, beginning with Richard Nixon, used to urge white voters to defect from a Democratic Party that supported civil rights. It continued for decades with attacks on busing, affirmative action, immigration and welfare, and was sounded most recently by Mr. Gingrich, with his attacks on Mr. Obama as "the food stamp president."

Fanning resentment of the poor - and deflecting attention from the relentless Republican defense of the rich - is also central to the party's current political strategy. That's why so many Republican candidates and lawmakers keep talking so angrily about poor people not paying federal income taxes. That's how the Tea Party got started in 2009, when Mr. Obama proposed lowering interest rates for homeowners who were behind on their mortgages and conservative activists saw an opportunity to pit the affluent against their struggling neighbors. And that's why Mr. Romney constantly accuses the president of trying to create "an entitlement society," which is simply a variant on Ronald Reagan's welfare-queen anecdotes.

And yet if Democrats dare to point out that the income gains of the top 1 percent have dwarfed everyone else's in the last few decades, they are accused of whipping up class envy. Alan Krueger, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, noted in a speech on Thursday that the median income in the United States had actually declined since 1999, shrinking the middle class while the income of the top 1 percent soared. Such inequality is corrosive. And pointing it out has nothing to do with envy and everything to do with pressing for policies to help America's struggling middle class.

Anyone who criticizes Mr. Romney's business practices now faces the absurd charge of putting free-market capitalism on trial. No one is trying to end capitalism, but President Obama is calling for more effective regulation to protect consumers. While Republicans attack a supposed "entitlement culture," Mr. Obama is calling for strengthening a desperately needed safety net. And he is calling for raising taxes on the wealthy, particularly for those on Wall Street and in private equity, to protect that safety net and reduce the deficit.

Mr. Romney has based his campaign on his business experience. Americans need to know how that experience was gained, and what values - if any - it represents. Class reality has nothing to do with class warfare.

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Dangerous Social Media Games Print
Sunday, 15 January 2012 11:05

York begins: "The emergence of China's '50 Cent Army' in 2004 marked a new phenomenon by paying commenters, working for or in close conjunction with the state, in an attempt to influence local attitudes. In the years since, numerous governments have tried their hand at similar efforts, with varying degrees of success."

File photo, Twitter homepage on computer monitor. (photo: Gallo/Getty)
File photo, Twitter homepage on computer monitor. (photo: Gallo/Getty)



Dangerous Social Media Games

By Jillian C. York, Al Jazeera

15 January 12

 

When a state must pay citizens to fight its online public relations wars, it has already lost.

he emergence of China's "50 Cent Army" in 2004 marked a new phenomenon by paying commenters, working for or in close conjunction with the state, in an attempt to influence local attitudes. In the years since, numerous governments have tried their hand at similar efforts, with varying degrees of success.

Now, a new plan exposed by the Electronic Intifada reveals that Israel's National Union of Israeli Students (NUIS) has created a scholarship programme to pay Israeli university students $2,000 to "help in the struggle against the delegitimisation of the State of Israel and against hatred of Jews in the world" by refuting online misinformation. Students would be required to attend training, after which they would be paid to work five hours per week from home.

While not directly a project of the Israeli government, according to original source documents, NUIS's project will act in co-operation with government ministries and external organisations - such as the US-based StandWithUs - to accomplish its goals.

This isn't the first time Israel has engaged citizens in shilling for the government. In 2009, the country's Foreign Ministry earmarked 600,000 NIS to establish an "internet warfare" squad to tackle online criticism of Israel. Israeli columnist Rona Kuperboim criticised the effort as "dangerous", writing: "The internet was meant to serve as an open platform for dialogue between people, rather than as a propaganda means."

Bad Company

Though they may differ in methods or target audience, the various initiatives by governments to influence public opinion through online propaganda are striking in their similarities.

In Russia, "web brigades" linked to state security services are rumoured to comment on popular blogs in an effort to defend the government. In 2011, Bahrain and Syria both appeared to employ citizens to spread pro-regime messages, the latter going so far as to encourage the hacking and defacement of sites supporting the opposition. And China's 50 Cent Army is notorious for its attempts to steer discussion on comment boards away from anti-government or dissident activity.

Even the US government has gotten in on the game. The Department of State's Digital Outreach Team paid Arabic and Farsi speakers to comment on anti-American content (though its staffers were required to identify themselves as paid employees). And again, in 2011, reports emerged that the US military Central Command (CENTCOM) was planning to create a system, dubbed Operation Earnest Voice, to target foreign websites with pro-US propaganda. The system would add to the existing efforts by the Department of State, but would differ in that CENTCOM's system would not identify commenters as working for the military.

Despite the efforts of his colleagues at the Department of State, Alec Ross, senior adviser for innovation to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Tuesday that he doesn't believe "propaganda works on social media". To Ross' credit, he and his colleagues' approach to Twitter tends to be more subdued and conversational, though other efforts from his office have been likened to propaganda as a "21st century complement to the more traditional broadcasts from Voice of America".

Dangerous Games

While earlier initiatives such as China's were aimed primarily at the citizens of a given state, the recent plans unveiled by Israel's NUIS are aimed at influencing foreign public opinion. It's easy to see why China would want to lead its own citizens away from anti-state material, but will Israeli students be successful in convincing a global populace of the Israeli state line?

The answer is complicated, but could be found by analysing existing efforts by the Israeli government. In the wake of the Israeli army's 2008-2009 attack on Gaza, the Israeli government launched a comprehensive online diplomacy effort complete with blogs, accounts on social media, and even a Twitter Q&A with the country's New York consulate.

The success of these initiatives is difficult to measure, but seems minimal: Not one of the Twitter accounts boasts more than 35,000 followers (compare that with the White House account, which has 2 million), and none of the recent posts on the official Israeli policy blog, israelpolitik.org, have received any comments.

On the other hand, the country's online outreach has sparked several controversies: Last summer, a damning video of a young gay activist claiming to have been excluded from the Gaza flotilla campaign that went viral with the help of the Israeli press office turned out to be a hoax, starring an intern from Netanyahu's office (the video's creator remains unknown). More recently, comments made by IDF spokesperson Avital Leibovich in respect to the killing of Mustafa Tamimi by soldiers sparked outrage in the blogosphere.

The outreach programme has also spawned numerous parodies, particularly on Twitter, where accounts such as @FakeIsraelMFA mock the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Part of Israel's problem may lie in its strategy. While Israeli consul general Ido Aharoni has argued that Israel's diplomatic "mistake" has been in defining itself in terms of conflict, Founder and President of Empax, Martin Kace, said at the Herzliya Conference that "a brand when it comes to a nation has to be true … [That's why] Israel's communications need to embody the conflict. Israel's brand lies in its difficulties, lies in its challenges. The conflict is such an integral part of what Israel is about."

In an age when even corporate brands are aiming to generate genuine dialogue and forge relationships with customers on social media, any attempt by a government to win over the hearts and minds of its detractors by ignoring their negative perceptions comes across as disingenuous. Rather than engaging detractors in dialogue, the propaganda undertaken by state actors is instead perceived as spam. Even more dangerous is the idea that journalists, still grappling with how best to report on social media, might be taken in by state propagandists.

It remains to be seen what approach Israel's NUIS will take, but if its scholarship recipients are to act as paid shills for the government, promoting Israel's successes whilst brushing aside its aggression, there is little indication their efforts will be successful.

Ultimately, Kuperboim is right: When a state - be it Bahrain, Israel, Syria or China - needs to stoop to the level of paying citizens to fight its public relations wars, it has already lost.

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Election 2012: 'Swift-boat on Steroids' Print
Saturday, 14 January 2012 09:52

Conniff writes: "United For the People, a coalition of public interest groups, is launching series of public events next week to mobilize opposition to Citizens United, and pressure Congress to amend the Constitution and enshrine in law the principle that corporations are not people and unlimited spending is not equivalent to political speech."

Activists rally in Washington, D.C. on January 21, 2011 for an amendment overturning Citizens United. (photo: Public Citizen/Flickr)
Activists rally in Washington, D.C. on January 21, 2011 for an amendment overturning Citizens United. (photo: Public Citizen/Flickr)



Election 2012: 'Swift-boat on Steroids'

By Ruth Conniff, The Progressive

14 January 12

 

he Presidential primary season has never seemed less relevant to ordinary Americans.

As the Mitt Romney juggernaut moves through New Hampshire and South Carolina, the sense that voters, even in early primary states, have anything at all to say about the eventual outcome of the elections is rapidly diminishing.

"This will be the most spending, in 2012, that we've ever seen in the history of the country - and even the world," Lisa Graves of the Center for Media and Democracy said in a telephone conference with reporters today. Thanks to the Supreme Court's two-year-old Citizens United decision, most of that spending, she added, is "dark money" - money spent by shadowy groups in order to influence the outcome of elections.

"It's swift-boat on steroids," Graves quipped.

No wonder Americans have trouble mustering much enthusiasm for the process.

But even as the presidential primary carnival devolves into more of a sideshow than ever this year, citizens' groups are mobilizing unprecedented political energy to combat the hijacking of our democracy by corporate cash.

United For the People, a coalition of public interest groups, is launching series of public events next week to mobilize opposition to Citizens United, and pressure Congress to amend the Constitution and enshrine in law the principle that corporations are not people and unlimited spending is not equivalent to political speech.

A week of events protesting the second anniversary of Citizens United will include:

January 18: The "Amend 2012" campaign, launched by Common Cause, which will put voter instruction measures on state ballots to get state governments and members of Congress to adopt an amendment that corporations are not people.

January 20: A large demonstration at the U.S. Supreme Court by Occupy the Courts, organized by Move to Amend, plus actions by 75 local and regional groups.

January 21: Protests targeting Bank of America with posters reading "I am a Person" by Occupy the Corporations, organized by Public Citizen.

January 24: Members of Congress will take part in a panel discussion in Washington, DC, on different versions of an anti-Citizens United amendment, sponsored by People for the American Way.

United For the People, a coalition of about 50 public-interest, religious, and progressive groups, is also launching a year-long push to get Congress to vote for a constitutional amendment stating that corporations are not people, and money is not speech.

There's even a funny YouTube video.

"People need to stand up with us and get these resolutions passed in their communities, to talk to their Congresspeople and find out what their position is and publish that widely. But really, what's most important is we need to get together and get more organized," Kaitlin Sopoci-Belknap, national field director for Move to Amend, says in a more serious, and informative, video: Citizens United v. FEC - what it means for democracy.

"Thousands of activists and concerned Americans across the country are taking a stand and declaring that our democracy should respond to the needs of the 99% – and is not for sale to the highest bidder," People for the American Way declared in a statement announcing the kick-off for next week's events.

With Mitt Romney's Super PAC outspending the candidate himself in Iowa, and a host of shadowy groups poised to outspend all of the candidates in the rest of the campaign, the effort could not be more timely.

Allowing corporations and CEOs to use unlimited money to amplify their voices "is going to dilute and distort our voices," Graves pointed out in the United for the People press call today.

Doug Clopp of Common Cause reinforced that point, with an anecdote about corporate influence on the Citizens United decision itself:

The pro-Citizens United Koch brothers hosted a luxury retreat attended by justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas just prior to the Citizens United decision.

"We are concerned about how Supreme Court justices conduct their affairs off the bench," Clopp said. That issue will be part of the Occupy the Courts action January 21.

Earlier this year, Common Cause attacked another high-profile Supreme Court ethics violation:

Hours after considering whether to hear challenges to constitutionality of national health care reform, the group reported.

Supreme Court justices Clarence Thomas and Antonin Scalia appeared at a Federalist Society fundraiser where they delivered speeches and were honored by the libertarian group - and hobnobbed with sponsoring law firms and their clients who are directly involved in the health care litigation.

It can seem overwhelming to tackle the oligarchy that seems to control political debate and public policy in our country.

That's why citizens' efforts like United for the People are so important, and inspiring.

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Iran: The Neocons Are At It Again Print
Thursday, 12 January 2012 15:06

Nader begins: "The same neocons who persuaded George W. Bush and crew to, in Ron Paul's inimitable words, 'lie their way into invading Iraq' in 2003, are beating the drums of war more loudly these days to attack Iran. It is remarkable how many of these war-mongers are former draft dodgers who wanted other Americans to fight the war in Vietnam."

Ralph Nader doing an interview during his 2008 Presidential campaign, 08/01/08. (photo: Scrape TV)
Ralph Nader doing an interview during his 2008 Presidential campaign, 08/01/08. (photo: Scrape TV)



Iran: The Neocons Are At It Again

By Ralph Nader, Reader Supported News

12 January 12

 

he same neocons who persuaded George W. Bush and crew to, in Ron Paul's inimitable words, "lie their way into invading Iraq" in 2003, are beating the drums of war more loudly these days to attack Iran. It is remarkable how many of these war-mongers are former draft dodgers who wanted other Americans to fight the war in Vietnam.

With the exception of Ron Paul, who actually knows the history of U.S.-Iranian relations, the Republican presidential contenders have declared their belligerency toward Iranian officials who they accuse of moving toward nuclear weapons.

The Iranian regime disputes that charge, claiming they are developing the technology for nuclear power and nuclear medicine.

The inspection teams of the International Atomic Energy Authority (IAEA) that monitor compliance with the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, to which Iran belongs, have entered Iran numerous times and, while remaining suspicious, have not been able to find that country on the direct road to the Bomb.

While many western and some Arab countries in the Gulf region have condemned Iran's alleged nuclear arms quest, Israel maintains some 200 ready nuclear weapons and has refused to sign the non-proliferation treaty, thereby avoiding the IAEA inspectors.

Israelis in the know have much to say. Defense minister, Ehud Barak, responded to PBS's Charlie Rose's question "If you were Iran wouldn't you want a nuclear weapon?" with these words:

"Probably, probably. I don't delude myself that they are doing it just because of Israel. They have their history of 4,000 years. They look around and they see the Indians are nuclear. The Chinese are nuclear, Pakistan is nuclear as well as North Korea, not to mention the Russians."

The Iranian regime, with a national GDP smaller than Massachusetts, is terrified. It is surrounded by powerful adversaries, including the U.S. military on three of its borders. President George W. Bush labeled Iran, along with Iraq and North Korea, one of the three "axis of evil," and Teheran knows what happened to Iraq after that White House assertion. They also know that North Korea inoculated itself from invasion by testing nuclear bombs. And all Iranians remember that the U.S. overthrew their popular elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh in 1953 and installed the dictatorial Shah who ruled tyrannically for the next 27 years.

Recently, Iran has experienced mysterious cyber sabotage, drone violations of its air space, the slaying of its nuclear scientists and the blowing up of its military sites, including a major missile installation. Israeli and American officials are not trying too hard to conceal this low level warfare.

Israel military historian-strategist Martin van Creveld said in 2004, that Iranians "would be crazy not to build nuclear weapons considering the security threats they face." Three years later he stated that "the world must now learn to live with a nuclear Iran the way we learned to live with a nuclear Soviet Union and a nuclear China....We Israelis have what it takes to deter an Iranian attack. We are in no danger at all of having an Iranian nuclear weapon dropped on us...thanks to the Iranian threat, we are getting weapons from the U.S. and Germany."

U.S. General John Abizaid is one of numerous military people who say that the world can tolerate a nuclear Iran-which, like other countries, does not wish to commit suicide.

Using the "Iranian threat," served Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, who on his first tour of duty back in 1996, speaking to a joint session of Congress, made a big point of the forthcoming Iranian bomb.

Somehow the Iranians, who were invaded in 1980 by a U.S.-backed Saddam Hussein, resulting in a million casualties, and who have not invaded anybody for 250 years, are taking a very long time to build a capability for atomic bomb production, much less the actual weapons.

In mid-2011, Meir Dagan, recently retired head of Israel's "CIA," repeated his opposition to a military attack on Iran's nuclear facilities, adding it would engulf the region in a conventional war.

He further took the Israeli government to task for failing "to put forth a vision," noting that "Israel must present an initiative to the Palestinians and adopt the 2002 Saudi Arabia peace proposal, reiterated since, that would open full diplomatic relations with some two dozen Arab and Islamic countries in return for an Israeli pullback to the 1967 borders and recognition of a Palestinian state."

The war-mongers against Iran have often distorted Iranian statements to suit their purpose and kept in the shadows several friendly Iranian initiatives offered to the George W. Bush Administration.

Flynt L. Leverett, now with Brookings and before a State Department and CIA official, listed three initiatives that were rejected. Right after the Sept. 11 attacks, Iran offered to help Washington overthrow the Taliban. The U.S. declined the offer. Second, in the spring of 2003, top Iranian officials sent the White House a detailed proposal for comprehensive negotiations to resolve questions regarding its weapons programs, relations with Hezbollah and Hamas and a Palestinian peace agreement with Israel. This proposal was rebuffed and ignored.

Third, in October 2003, European officials secured an agreement from Iran to suspend Iranian uranium enrichment and to pursue talks that Mr. Leverett said "might lead to an economic, nuclear and strategic deal." The Bush administration "refused to join the European initiative, ensuring that the talks failed," he added.

A few days ago, U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said Iran was developing a capability for making nuclear weapons someday but was not yet building a bomb. So why is the Obama Administration talking about a western boycott of Iran's oil exports, so crucial to its faltering, sanctions-ridden economy? Is this latest sanction designed to squeeze Iranian civilians and lead to the overthrow of the regime? Arguably it may backfire and produce more support for the government.

Backing the Iranian regime into such a fateful corner risks counter-measures that may disrupt the gigantic flow of oil through the Strait of Hormuz. Should that occur, watch the prices of your gasoline, heating bill and other related products go through the roof-among other consequences.

Isn't it about time for the abdicatory Congress to reassert its constitutional responsibilities? It owes the American people comprehensive, public House and Senate hearings that produce knowledgeable testimony about these issues and all relevant history for wide media coverage.

The drums of war should not move our country into a propagandized media frenzy that preceded and helped cause the Iraq invasion with all the socio-cide in that country and all the costly blowbacks against U.S. national interests?

It is past time for the American citizenry to wake up and declare: Iran will not be an Iraq Redux!

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