The
War Pimp
by Karen
Kwiatkowski
by Karen Kwiatkowski
DIGG THIS
The DoD Inspector
General, after over fourteen months of diligent and
surely difficult investigation, has concluded that the Office
of Special Plans, and Doug Feith as Under Secretary for Policy,
…developed,
produced and then disseminated alternative intelligence assessments
on the Iraq and al-Qaida relationship which included some conclusions
that were inconsistent with the consensus of the intelligence
committee and… presented these to senior decision makers.
I’m happy to
say it didn’t
take me fourteen months to figure that out. I’m happy to say
that it didn’t take most of us who worked in the Under Secretariat
for Defense Policy, Near East and South Asia directorate fourteen
months to figure it out. We saw the CIA and DIA intelligence, we
understood the region, and we watched Doug Feith, Abe Shulsky, Paul
Wolfowitz, Richard Perle, Ahmad Chalabi, Bill Luti and a handful
of others in and around the upper echelons of the Pentagon create
a preferred alternate universe, and then foist it on an unsuspecting
country.
We
knew Scooter before the world did.
Doug Feith
retired a year and a half ago – and has been quietly embarrassing
Georgetown
ever since. Now he’s back in the news, sputtering and whining and
becoming really quite angry.
Here’s what
he says now:
We weren’t
creating alternative intelligence, we were just "criticizing"
the CIA. Isn’t that a good thing?
The CIA had
it wrong anyway, so what’s the problem?
It wasn’t
illegal, according to the IG report….
It’s not
a crime, it’s just criticism.
The government
should be doing more of it, and it is misguided …that intelligence
people should not be allowed to raise questions about – policy
people should not be allowed to raise questions about intelligence.
Feith makes
his points – long before the IG report was published – in a 2005
interview with Wolf
Blitzer. In 2005, he says things like "I don’t know where
[former Army Secretary Thomas White] got [the idea that Feith's
team had the mindset that this would be a relatively straightforward,
manageable task …[and] reconstruction would be short-lived] from"
and "I think the Iraq operation was done very well." Feith
goes on to say, "As you know… if you have the ability to produce
insecticide or fertilizer, you have the ability to produce chemical
and biological weapons stockpile." In Feithland, to be truly
safe, you bomb the farmers AND the factories.
These days,
Feith is telling Wolf that "we are in trouble in Iraq because
of errors that the CIA made" and "I
believed George Tenet" [on the relationship between Saddam
Hussein and al Qaeda].
Clearly, Douglas
Feith is the victim here.
Here’s how
it goes. Feith was working hard at the highest levels of the Pentagon,
and he noticed that the story being put out about the threat Iraq
posed to the United States was simply wrong and inconsistent with
the facts. Strangely wrong and absurdly inconsistent with the facts.
Feith criticizes those who are putting out the bad poop to decision-makers.
He tries to speak out, but faces leadership obstacles at every turn.
Finally, he quits his post and goes public with his observations,
and begins to do his small part to improve the system from the outside,
as a member of the loyal opposition. He suffers public defamation,
insults and demagoguery from the Pentagon machine he once served.
No. Wait… sorry.
That’s
my story.
Here’s the
Feith story. Wanted to bring on the next
phase of an Israel-centered Middle East, which required a UN
Security Council veto and a great big military-industrial complex
with expansionist dreams. The United States could provide both,
but the CIA stood in the way because there was no legitimate casus
belli to rally the Congress or the people. Surely the invasion
couldn’t be advertised in the context of oil contracts, propping
up the petrodollar, Tim LeHaye’s visions, or a personal vendetta
by a half-witted President. 9-11 could serve – if only Saddam Hussein
could be associated with dangerous weapons of mass destruction,
anti-American terrorists, and if there were an Iraqi link to 9-11.
An alternate universe of propaganda was necessary, and Feith worked
hard to make it happen. The propaganda machine was emplaced, and
any CIA intelligence that did not fit this normative agenda was
"criticized." Further, this critique (alternate universe
style) was provided to willing (if often passive) partners in the
executive branch, the media, and Congress as if it were valid and
validated. Yes, inappropriate in the eyes of some, illegal, immoral
and impeachable offenses to others. But history, Feith feels, will
prove the wisdom of this Feith-based initiative, a.k.a. "Pimp
Your War."
Doug Feith
and his ideological partners have whored out the American defense
establishment, and if a few thousand soldiers and marines get beat
up or even killed, well, at least the game goes on. For Feith and
his friends, physical destruction of inconvenient states is a victimless
crime, and a whole lot of fun to boot. So what if a few lies were
told to make the deal. And
are we really going to stop after we’ve come this far?
And unlike
prostitution, it wasn’t even illegal. It’s enough to have people
saying, "There
ought to be a law!"
If Feith’s
protestations – that he was just innocently helping the CIA do a
better job – fail to convince an increasingly disgusted public and
a slowly awakening Congress, he will, like
Scooter before him, begin to say, "I was set up!"
I can’t wait to watch the next episode.
February
14, 2007
LRC
columnist Karen Kwiatkowski, Ph.D. [send
her mail], a retired USAF lieutenant colonel, has written on
defense issues with a libertarian perspective for MilitaryWeek.com,
hosted the call-in radio show American
Forum, and blogs occasionally for Huffingtonpost.com
and Liberty and Power.
Archives of her American Forum radio program can be accessed here
and here. To receive
automatic announcements of new articles, click
here.
Copyright ©
2007 Karen Kwiatkowski
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