[THS] Neocons and the Truth: Bitter Enemies to the End

Peter Webster vignes at wanadoo.fr
Fri May 9 14:56:23 CEST 2008


http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article19886.htm

Neocons and the Truth: Bitter Enemies to the End

By Glenn Greenwald

08/05/08 "Salon.com" -- - In a July, 2006 article in Rolling Stone — entitled
“Iran: The Next War” — the superb journalist James Bamford detailed the
shady activities of numerous neoconservatives inside and out of the U.S.
Government to plan an attack on Iran. Bamford focused on the role played
by Michael Ledeen of the American Enterprise Institute and National
Review, who created and began implementing an attack scheme in
coordination with the Pentagon’s then number-three official, Doug Feith,
and Feith’s deputy, Larry Franklin (subsequently convicted of felonies for
passing classified information to AIPAC).

A couple weeks after Bamford’s exposè was published, National Review
enlisted former federal prosecutor Andrew McCarthy and talk show host
Mark Levin jointly to author a defense of Ledeen and, more importantly, to
savage Bamford for writing what they claimed was a pack of lies. The
McCarthy/Levin article was entitled “Rolling Smear,” sub-headlined “James
Bamford writes a fiction about our Michael Ledeen,” and accused Bamford
of being “the latest in a growing crowd of hacks to smear our friend Michael
Ledeen.”

McCarthy and Levin specifically attacked Bamford’s disclosure that Ledeen
“had arranged a covert meeting in Rome with a group of Iranians [and
Feith’s team] to discuss their clandestine help” in attacking Iran. Said
McCarthy and Levin:

    Bamford, to the contrary, wants to turn the meeting into a nefarious plot
by Ledeen and the neocons to push the nation into war with Iran. Yet,
anyone even vaguely familiar with Michael’s work knows that he has
opposed military action against Iran — notwithstanding that he was years
ahead of most experts in accurately portraying Iran’s role as the terror
master at the center of the jihadist network.

So Bamford’s claim was “embarrassing” because “anyone even vaguely
familiar with Michael’s work knows that he has opposed military action
against Iran.” Got that?

Here’s Ledeen yesterday, writing in National Review’s Corner (h/t sysporg):

    Time to Attack Iranian Terror Camps? [Michael Ledeen]

    So says John Bolton, and he’s right. As you know, I have been proposing
this for years. I always thought it was only a matter of time before we were
compelled to take this action, which is a legitimate form of self-defense. And
while we’re at it, we should do the same thing to the Syrian camps as well.
It isn’t “sending a message,” it’s acting to protect our guys by fighting back
in the proxy war the mullahs have been waging since 1979. Faster, please?


More amazingly, a mere two weeks before McCarthy and Levin wrote that
“anyone even vaguely familiar with Michael’s work knows that he has
opposed military action against Iran,” Ledeen himself wrote at The Corner
that “I would insist that my soldiers have the right of ‘hot pursuit’ into Iran
and Syria, and I would order my armed forces to attack the terrorist
training camps in those countries.”

In late 2006, I wrote about virtually identical deceit from this same group,
that time with regard to Iraq. On National Review in December of 2006,
Ledeen — just as the Beltway establishment was finally turning against the
war in Iraq and in the wake of a lengthy Vanity Fair article identifying the
neocons who were to blame — claimed: “I opposed the military invasion of
Iraq before it took place.”

In fact, Ledeen, throughout 2002 and 2003, had repeatedly and explicitly
urged the invasion of Iraq in countless venues, including: The Wall St.
Journal’s Op-Ed Page (”If we come to Baghdad, Damascus and Tehran as
liberators, we can expect overwhelming popular support”); in an interview
with David Horowitz’s Front Page (”Question #2: Okay, well if we are all so
certain about the dire need to invade Iraq, then when do we do so?
Ledeen: Yesterday.”); on MSNBC’s Hardball with Chris Matthews (”if
President Bush is to be faulted for anything in this so far, it’s that he’s taken
much too long to get on with it, much too long”); and in National Review
(calling for “the desperately-needed and long overdue war against Saddam
Hussein and the rest of the terror masters”).

That war-cheerleading neoconservatives of this strain are completely
unbound by the truth is not news. Obviously, the war they unleashed in
Iraq is the most compelling proof of that. But sometimes when the lying is
so blatant, one can’t help but note it.

The same is true for the complete lack of accountability. Ledeen is a so-
called “Freedom Scholar” at the revered and widely-cited American
Enterprise Institute and a Contributing Editor at National Review. An intense
email campaign over his Iraq comments to AEI and National Review’s Editor
Rich Lowry demanding a retraction or some comment from them on
Ledeen’s blatant falsehoods over his Iraq stance was simply ignored, as will
be this episode concerning the article by McCarthy and Levin smearing
Bamford due to Ledeen’s alleged opposition to attacking Iran.

This isn’t just a matter of documenting guilt with regard to what happened
with Iraq. The Washington Post’s David Ignatius today became just the
latest establishment spokesman to warn (or celebrate) that “judging from
recent statements by administration officials, there is also a small, but
growing, chance of conflict with Iran.”

The neoconservative war-lovers behind this effort have not changed, nor
have their tactics. They realize, as many of them acknowledge, that they
will have four more years in power if John McCain is elected. But they also
realize that he may not be, and that their last hope for their long-desired
attack on Iran lies in convincing the current administration to provoke one
before its tenure ends. As much as one wishes it weren’t true, as much as
the fixation on petty election issues might obscure it, the truly depraved
extremist group that brought us the invasion of Iraq still exerts substantial
influence and is quite busy trying to exert it.

UPDATE: It isn’t just the American neocons, but also the Israelis, who are
escalating the “Attack Iran” campaign. The Jerusalem Post yesterday
“reported” that “with Iran racing forward with its nuclear program, Israel
now believes the Islamic Republic will master centrifuge technology and be
able to begin enriching uranium on a military scale this year” (h/t quick
strategy) and:

    The new assessment moves up Israel’s forecasts on Teheran’s nuclear
program by almost a full year — from 2009 to the end of 2008. According to
the new timeline, Iran could have a nuclear weapon by the middle of next
year.

According to several commenters, the Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. was
on Fox News this morning making the same fear-mongering claim.

The principal tactic Israel-centric neocons have repeatedly used with Bush
to induce him to attack Iran has been to tell him that history will judge him
based on whether he permits Iran to obtain a nuclear weapon. From The
Weekly Standard’s Irwin Stelzer, writing about a 2007 White House
luncheon with Bush, historian Andrew Roberts, and a group of necons:

    The closing note was a more serious one. Roberts said that history would
judge the president on whether he had prevented the nuclearization of the
Middle East. If Iran gets the bomb, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and other
countries will follow. “That is why I am so pleased to be sitting here rather
than in your chair, Mr. President.” There was no response, other than a
serious frown and a nod.

Norman Podhoretz, when telling the President to bomb Iran, used the same
tactic:

    “I urged Bush to take action against the Iranian nuclear facilities and
explained why I thought there was no alternative,” said Podhoretz, 77, in
an interview with The Sunday Times. . . .

    He also told Bush: “You have the awesome responsibility to prevent
another holocaust. You’re the only one with the guts to do it.” . . . .
    “The president has said several times that he will be in the historical dock
if he allows Iran to get the bomb. He believes that if we wait for threats to
fully materialise, we’ll have waited too long — something I agree with
100%,’ Podhoretz said.

And now, magically up pops these new reports from Israel warning that the
deadline to stop Iran’s nuclear bomb is the end of the year — right before
George Bush leaves office. Bush has less than eight months left to fulfill his
history-mandated mission “to prevent another holocaust” by attacking Iran,
or else “be in the historical dock if he allows Iran to get the bomb.” They’re
as transparent as they are dishonest and bloodthirsty.

Glenn Greenwald was previously a constitutional law and civil rights litigator
in New York. He is the author of the New York Times Bestselling book “How
Would a Patriot Act?,” a critique of the Bush administration’s use of
executive power, released in May 2006. His second book, “A Tragic Legacy“,
examines the Bush legacy.

© Salon.com





More information about the Theharderstuff mailing list