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Old 05-03-2007, 12:54 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Wolfowitz the "Iraq war architect" ?

It says so on CNN :
http://money.cnn.com/2007/05/03/news...ion=2007050313
Quote:
Wolfowitz fights to hold on to job
World Bank president, Iraq War architect defiant in new letter to committee.
Since when do bankers manage wars ?
And this war is supposed to be for "freedom" and stuff ?
I am sure nobody will see a problem with the news from above. Some things are hidden in plain view
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Old 05-03-2007, 02:37 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Pai mei: bankers manage wars when they aren't bankers - specifically when their day gig is to be the deputy secretary of defense.

The real question is, since when do defense ministers run international quasi-governmental banks?

As much as I loathe quoting wikipedia as though it were a meaningful source, you can confirm this information easily by perusing archives of newspaper articles. This guy been a hawk activist at the highest levels of government 10 years before I was born.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Wikipedia
The terrorist attacks of 9-11 proved to be a radical turning point in administration policy as Wolfowitz later explained “9/11 really was a wake up call and that if we take proper advantage of this opportunity to prevent the future terrorist use of weapons of mass destruction that it will have been an extremely valuable wake up call.”[18] He went on to clarify that "if we say our only problem was to respond to 9/11, and we wait until somebody hits us with nuclear weapons before we take that kind of threat seriously, we will have made a very big mistake." In the first emergency meeting of the U.S. National Security Council on the day of the attacks Rumsfeld asked “Why shouldn’t we go against Iraq, not just al-Qaeda?” with Wolfowitz adding that Iraq was a “brittle, oppressive regime that might break easily - it was doable” and according to Kampfner “from that moment on, he and Wolfowitz used every available opportunity to press the case”. The idea was initially rejected, mainly at the behest of U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell but according to Kampfner “Undeterred Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz held secret meetings about opening up a second front – against Saddam. Powell was excluded.” Out of this came the creation of what would later be dubbed the Bush Doctrine, centering on pre-emption and American unilateralism, as well as the war on Iraq which the PNAC advocated in their earlier letters but first there was Afghanistan to deal with.
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Last edited by ubertuber; 05-03-2007 at 02:48 PM..
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Old 05-03-2007, 02:39 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Since the two roles are related. What does the world bank do? Make billions and billions for the rich. What does the war on Iraq do? Make billions and billions for the rich.
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Old 05-04-2007, 09:41 AM   #4 (permalink)
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Below is support for the opinion that Wolfowitz has been right less often than a broken clock. WTF is he doing in his present job?
If there really is a GWOT, how can this account about his girlfriend, be explained?
Watch what they do, not what they say.....
Quote:
http://www.salon.com/opinion/blument...urce=whitelist

....Wolfowitz's girlfriend, Shaha Ali Riza, is a Libyan, raised in Saudi Arabia, educated at Oxford, who now has British citizenship. She is divorced; he is separated. Their discreet relationship became a problem only when he ascended to the World Bank presidency. Riza had floated through the neoconservative network -- working at the Free Iraq Foundation in the early 1990s and the National Endowment for Democracy -- until landing a position in the Middle East and African department of the World Bank. The ethics provisions of Wolfowitz's contract, however, stipulated that he could not maintain a sexual relationship with anyone over whom he had supervisory authority, even indirectly.

Back in 2003, Wolfowitz had taken care of Riza by directing his trusted Pentagon deputy, Undersecretary of Defense Douglas Feith -- who had been in charge of the Office of Special Plans and had been Wolfowitz's partner in managing the CPA -- to arrange for a military contract for her from Science Applications International Corp. When the contract was exposed this week, SAIC issued a statement that it "had no role in the selection of the personnel." In other words, the firm with hundreds of millions in contracts at stake had been ordered to hire Riza.

Riza was unhappy about leaving the sinecure at the World Bank. But in 2006 Wolfowitz made a series of calls to his friends that landed her a job at a new think tank called Foundation for the Future that is funded by the State Department. She was the sole employee, at least in the beginning. The World Bank continued to pay her salary, which was raised by $60,000 to $193,590 annually, more than the $183,500 paid to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, and all of it tax-free. Moreover, Wolfowitz got the State Department to agree that the ratings of her performance would automatically be "outstanding." Wolfowitz insisted on these terms himself and then misled the World Bank board about what he had done.

Exactly how this deal was made and with whom remains something of a mystery. The person who did work with Riza in her new position was Elizabeth Cheney, then the deputy assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs. And Riza's assignment fell under the purview of Karen Hughes, undersecretary of state for public diplomacy. But these facts raise more questions than they answer.

The documents released by the World Bank do not include any of the communications with the State Department. How did Elizabeth Cheney come to be involved? Did Wolfowitz speak with Vice President Dick Cheney, for whom he had been a deputy when Cheney was secretary of defense in the elder Bush's administration?

Riza, who is not a U.S. citizen, had to receive a security clearance in order to work at the State Department. Who intervened? It is not unusual to have British or French midlevel officers at the department on exchange programs, but they receive security clearances based on the clearances they already have with their host governments. Granting a foreign national who is detailed from an international organization a security clearance, however, is extraordinary, even unprecedented. So how could this clearance have been granted?

State Department officials familiar with the details of this matter confirmed to me that Shaha Ali Riza was detailed to the State Department and had unescorted access while working for Elizabeth Cheney. Access to the building requires a national security clearance or permanent escort by a person with such a clearance. But the State Department has no record of having issued a national security clearance to Riza.

State Department officials believe that Riza was issued such a clearance by the Defense Department after SAIC was forced by Wolfowitz and Feith to hire her. Then her clearance would have been recognized by the State Department through a credentials transmittal letter and Riza would have accessed the State Department on Pentagon credentials, using her Pentagon clearance to get a State Department building pass with a letter issued under instructions from Liz Cheney.

But State Department officials tell me that no such letter can be confirmed as received. And the officials stress that the department would never issue a clearance to a non-U.S. citizen as part of a contractual requisition. Issuing a national security clearance to a foreign national under instructions from a Pentagon official would constitute a violation of the executive orders governing clearances, they say.

Given these circumstances, the inspector general of the Defense Department should be ordered to investigate how Shaha Ali Riza was issued a Pentagon security clearance. And the inspector general of the State Department should investigate who ordered Riza's building pass and whether there was a Pentagon credentials transmittal letter.

Wolfowitz's willful behavior, as though no rules bound him or facts constrained his ideas, should not have surprised anyone. At the Pentagon, Wolfowitz was an insistent force behind an invasion of Iraq, bringing it up at the first National Security Council meeting of the Bush administration, months before Sept. 11. For years he had been a firm believer in the crackpot theories of Laurie Mylroie, a neoconservative writer, who argued that Saddam was behind the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and even the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. After Sept. 11, Wolfowitz pursued his obsession by sending former CIA Director James Woolsey on a secret mission to attempt to confirm the theory. Woolsey came back with nothing, but Wolfowitz continued to believe. His beliefs are stronger than any evidence.
Quote:
http://www.senate.gov/~levin/newsroo....cfm?id=262690
On February 6, 2003, Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz said, "And, worst of all, his connections with terrorists, which go back decades, and which started some 10 years ago with al-Qa'ida, are growing every day."
Quote:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp...nguage=printer
Despite Obstacles to War, White House Forges Ahead
Administration Unfazed by Iraq's Pledge to Destroy Missiles, Turkish Parliament's Rejection of Use of Bases

By Karen DeYoung and Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, March 2, 2003; Page A18

.......Even as it sent senior envoys around the world to twist the arms of recalcitrant council members -- particularly the half-dozen undecided governments it refers to as the "U-6" -- the administration in recent days has expanded both its rationale for war and on-the-ground activities indicating the conflict has already begun. ......

..... Wolfowitz also estimated the U.S. cost of Iraqi "containment" during 12 years of U.N. sanctions, weapons inspections and continued U.S. air patrols over the country at "slightly over $30 billion," but he said the price had been "far more than money." Sustained U.S. bombing of Iraq over those years, and the stationing of U.S. forces "in the holy land of Saudi Arabia," were "part of the containment policy that has been Osama bin Laden's principal recruiting device, even more than the other grievances he cites," Wolfowitz said.

Implying that a takeover in Iraq would eliminate the need for U.S. forces in Saudi Arabia, and thus reduce the appeal of terrorist groups for new members, Wolfowitz said: "I can't imagine anyone here wanting to spend another $30 billion to be there for another 12 years to continue helping recruit terrorists."
Quote:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp...nguage=printer
For Wolfowitz, a Vision May Be Realized
Deputy Defense Secretary's Views on Free Iraq Considered Radical in Ways Good and Bad

By Michael Dobbs
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, April 7, 2003; Page A17

Four days after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz made a forceful case to President Bush for expanding the war on terrorism to include the government of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.

At the time, many people in Washington, including some senior members of the Bush administration, thought that Wolfowitz was way out on a limb. A year and a half later, Wolfowitz's long-held dream of ridding the world of a leader he regards as one of the cruelest of modern-day despots and a direct threat to the security of the United States seems on the point of being realized.

But getting rid of Hussein was only part of the Wolfowitz vision. With U.S. forces poised on the outskirts of Baghdad, an even bigger, and in some ways more controversial, challenge now awaits: creating a free, stable and democratic Iraq that will serve as an inspiration to its neighbors.

Wolfowitz's fervent belief in what he calls "the power of the democratic idea" -- and its applicability to a part of the world better known for authoritarian regimes, many of them closely allied to Washington -- has won him both admirers and detractors.

To his supporters, Wolfowitz is a visionary thinker, a tough-minded intellectual with a streak of idealism. While emphasizing that he was not alone in calling for the United States to confront Hussein, they credit him with helping to devise a daring strategy for the Iraqi leader's overthrow that will reshape the politics of the Middle East in a way that will be hugely beneficial for the United States.

To his critics, the former international relations dean at Johns Hopkins University is an ambitious ideologue, whose theories about democracy-building in the Arab world are at once naive and dangerous. They fear that the end result of the Wolfowitz doctrine is more likely to be an upsurge of anti-Americanism around the world and a flood of recruits for Osama bin Laden.

Largely as a result of his decade-long effort to lay the intellectual groundwork for Hussein's overthrow, Wolfowitz has become "probably the best-known deputy secretary of defense in recent memory," a top White House aide said. His influence within the administration as a shaper of national security strategy far exceeds his second-tier rank in the bureaucratic hierarchy. More than any other senior administration official, his own political fortunes are closely tied to Hussein's demise.

"I've met quite a few dictators up close and personal in my life," Wolfowitz said, listing the former leaders of the Philippines, Indonesia and South Korea. Hussein, he said, is in an "entirely different league" because of the totalitarian nature of the society he created and the fear that he still inspires among many Iraqis.

In the Arab world, and much of Europe, Wolfowitz is often talked about as the leading light of a small band of neo-conservative thinkers who have allegedly hijacked U.S. foreign policy and launched it in dangerous new directions. A senior figure in the Democratic Party's foreign policy establishment, who declined to be quoted by name, argued that Wolfowitz has achieved his eminence by ensuring that he is always "the most conservative, hard-line person in the room, and that no one is to his right politically."

In an hour-long interview in his Pentagon office as U.S. forces closed in on Baghdad, and a telephone conversation yesterday, Wolfowitz took issue with "some very harmful, inaccurate caricatures" that, he said, misrepresent his ideas and the intentions of the Bush administration. He said he dislikes such labels as "hawk" and "neo-conservative" because "I don't think they fit me very well. I certainly don't like a label that suggests I believe that the military is the solution to most of the world's problems."

The principal reason for going after Hussein, Wolfowitz argued, was the direct threat the Iraqi leader posed to U.S. national security through his possession of weapons of mass destruction. But he made clear that he thinks the overthrow of a brutal dictatorship in Iraq, and its replacement by even a half-decent regime, will have beneficial effects throughout the Arab world.

"He is a revolutionary, in a way," said former left-wing firebrand Christopher Hitchens, who figures on an eclectic list of Wolfowitz admirers, drawn up by Wolfowitz aides, that ranges from former secretary of state George Shultz to leaders of the Iraqi-American community. Hitchens said he likes Wolfowitz precisely because he is willing to "make war on the status quo" in the Middle East and destroy a "fascistic regime" in Iraq even if it means "quarrelling with the Saudis, the Turks, a chunk of the oil lobby here, and part of the American right."

Hishal Melhem, a leading Arab journalist who recently interviewed Wolfowitz for the satellite news station Al Arabiya, said: "It takes my breath away when I think about the scale of the transformation that [Wolfowitz and others] are trying to achieve in the Middle East. It is so radical, so optimistic, so audacious. It is a new American imperium. . . . They are going to create an earthquake in Iraq that will reverberate throughout the region."
'Something to Overcome'

Wolfowitz's preoccupation -- some say obsession -- with Saddam Hussein goes back to his first stint at the Pentagon, between 1977 and 1980, when he was asked to analyze military threats in the Persian Gulf region, particularly to oil-rich Saudi Arabia. Other officials focused on the threat from Iran, then in the throes of an Islamic revolution, and the Soviet Union. Wolfowitz thought the main threat came from Iraq, and called for the United States to pre-position military equipment in the region for use in a conflict.

A still-secret Pentagon paper Wolfowitz authored in 1979 included the line, "It seems likely that we and Iraq will increasingly be at odds."

For much of the 1980s, U.S. policy tilted toward Baghdad, which was seen as a barrier to the spread of Iranian-style fundamentalism.

But Wolfowitz's prediction proved prescient in August 1990 when Hussein invaded Kuwait. At the time, Wolfowitz was serving as undersecretary of defense for policy. He said he was dismayed by the U.S. unwillingness to support an uprising by southern Iraqi Shiites at the end of the 1991 Persian Gulf War that drove Iraq from Kuwait, and particularly the unwillingness to shoot down Iraqi military helicopters that were used to terrorize the rebels.

The failed 1991 uprising, Wolfowitz suggested, goes a long way in explaining why Iraqis have been cautious about openly expressing enthusiasm for U.S. military forces since they invaded the country 2 1/2 weeks ago. "The main complaint against us . . . is that we abandoned them in 1991," he said. "I think that will be something to overcome."
'Off the Mark'

As it became clear that Hussein was playing a cat-and-mouse game with U.N. weapons inspectors enforcing the 1991 armistice, Wolfowitz became a leading proponent of again using U.S. military force against Iraq. His initial idea was to create a "liberated zone" in southern Iraq, protected by U.S. air power, to which Iraqi forces could defect. His views ran counter to the option favored by the majority of the foreign policy establishment, including many leading Republicans, who maintained that Hussein could be contained by "no-fly" zones and international sanctions, and by the presence of thousands of U.S. troops on Iraq's borders.

After Sept. 11, 2001, everything changed. It was then that Bush decided, in a phrase he used recently, that "the doctrine of containment just doesn't hold any water," at least in the case of Iraq. At a meeting at Camp David on Sept. 15, 2001, Wolfowitz alarmed such bureaucratic rivals as Secretary of State Colin L. Powell by arguing in favor of confronting Iraq earlier rather than later.

Although he declined to personalize the dispute, Wolfowitz said he had the feeling "that the people who were saying Iraq later were really saying Iraq never. . . . They kept saying more time, more time, and increasingly it's clear they just mean live with the situation."

Wolfowitz's attempts to link Hussein to al Qaeda, bin Laden's terrorist network, and to paint a generally rosy picture of post-Hussein Iraq, have put him at odds with part of the uniformed military. One now-retired general who worked closely with Wolfowitz after Sept. 11 depicted him as much less abrasive than his boss, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, but overly "aggressive" and "imaginative" in his interpretation of often-ambiguous intelligence findings.

Wolfowitz was recently involved in a rare public dispute with the Army chief of staff, Gen. Eric K. Shinseki, who estimated that hundreds of thousands of troops may be needed to occupy Iraq after Hussein's overthrow. "Wildly off the mark," was Wolfowitz's comment. Some senior military officers suspect that Wolfowitz was worried that public support for an invasion of Iraq could be undermined by too frank a discussion about the long-term costs.

Enlisted by Pentagon officials to address these criticisms last week, Marine Gen. Peter Pace, the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, steered clear of the controversy. He said the size of the occupation force is simply "not knowable . . . because we don't know how much damage we are going to do to that country to free that country." While conceding that "some people" felt that Wolfowitz had "a predisposition" to believe the worst of Hussein, Pace said the war plan relied on solid intelligence.

"He is very smart," Pace said of Wolfowitz. "He has the courage of his convictions to say what he believes to be the truth, even if it runs counter to what others may be saying."

Wolfowitz's friends and allies say that the depiction of him as an ultra-hawk, close to the Israeli lobby, is unfair and inaccurate. They note that he was booed at a huge pro-Israel rally in April 2002 when he talked about the suffering of Palestinians as well as Israelis.

"He is surprisingly pragmatic, given the public perceptions about him," said Lewis "Scooter" Libby, a longtime friend and chief of staff to Vice President Cheney. "He has a mental agility that enables him to get there in ways that other people don't see at first."
'High Point'

Wolfowitz's father, a brilliant mathematician whose family fled anti-Semitism in Poland and lost many relatives in the Holocaust, instilled in him a hatred of totalitarianism and a belief in the United States' power to do good. His later intellectual odyssey is about as close as one gets to a classic neo-conservative trajectory.

As a senior in high school in Upstate New York, Wolfowitz said he stuck out as a supporter of John F. Kennedy. He studied political philosophy at the University of Chicago under Albert Wohlstetter, the nuclear terror theorist who was an inspiration, along with Henry Kissinger, for the film "Dr. Strangelove." That led to work for Sen. Henry M. Jackson, a hawkish Washington state Democrat known as "Scoop" who believed in using U.S. power for humanitarian purposes.

After serving at the Pentagon during the Carter administration, Wolfowitz remained a registered Democrat until he joined the Reagan administration as head of policy planning at the State Department. He said it was not he who changed his political philosophy so much as the Democratic Party, which abandoned the hard-headed internationalism of Harry Truman, Kennedy and Jackson.

By Wolfowitz's account, the pivotal moment in his early political career came in 1985 when, as assistant secretary of state for Asia, he helped distance the Reagan administration from Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos. His office wall at the Pentagon is adorned with pictures from that period, including one taken in the White House the day Marcos was overthrown, depicting an exhausted-looking Wolfowitz sitting in the background as President Ronald Reagan was briefed on developments in the crisis.

"I actually thought it probably was the high point of my career," Wolfowitz said. "I never expected to do anything as interesting or as important" again.

When Wolfowitz talks about building democracy in Iraq after the overthrow of Hussein, he often does so through the prism of his own experiences in Asia, not just in the Philippines but also in Indonesia, where he was ambassador from 1986 to 1988. Some argue that it is a misleading comparison. The People Power Revolution that toppled Marcos was largely indigenous, in contrast to Iraq, where a post-Hussein government will arrive in the exhaust of American tanks.

The Philippines also had some experience with democracy, said Stephen Bosworth, who was ambassador to Manila at the time of Marcos's overthrow. In Iraq, democracy will have to be built almost from scratch.

Bosworth, who is now dean of the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, also provides a somewhat different account of Wolfowitz's role in distancing the United States from Marcos. For a long time, he said, Wolfowitz and other senior Reagan administration officials took the view that "Marcos is a major part of the problem, but first we must make him part of the solution. . . . His initial instinct was to work with Marcos. There did not seem to be any alternative."

Sen. Richard G. Lugar (R-Ind.), the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, described Wolfowitz as being "well ahead of the curve" in the internal administration debate over what to do about Marcos. He said Wolfowitz's views about Iraq appeared to be motivated by "high idealism" and "concern for human rights."

"I have never seen so much loose thinking about democracy," countered Thomas Carothers, a scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace who has studied U.S. democracy-building efforts worldwide. "The idea that you can produce a democratic tidal wave throughout the Arab world is a dangerous fantasy. What we are ending up producing is incredible hatred."
'Desire for Freedom'

Wolfowitz acknowledged that every country is different, and Iraq is not the Philippines. He said post-Hussein Iraq may have more in common with Romania after the overthrow of Nicolae Ceausescu, the most megalomaniac of East European communist leaders who was toppled from power in 1989. He noted that Romania's progress toward democracy has been uneven, but that the country has done "a lot better than one would have predicted" for a society thoroughly infiltrated by the secret police.

In Iraq's case, Wolfowitz said, memories of the Hussein dictatorship may provide "a unifying force." They may lead people to say, "Wait a minute, remember what it was like when we fell to quarrelling with each other, or when we let the army get too strong, or when we let decisions be made by force."

In a speech in October about the future of Iraq, Wolfowitz described how the demise of Hussein's "despotic regime" would promote the "ageless desire for freedom" throughout the Middle East. Some of the ideas he expressed in that speech reappeared in a presidential address to the American Enterprise Institute in February in which Bush spoke about post-Hussein Iraq as "a dramatic and inspiring example of freedom for other nations in the region."

Wolfowitz is guarded about how far the democracy process should go, or how the United States would react if anti-American governments come to power in such authoritarian countries as Egypt or Saudi Arabia as the result of free elections. He said he favors "a case-by-case approach."

For the moment, he seems to be thinking about much more modest changes, along the lines of those that the Reagan administration urged on Marcos before his fall from power. He described his philosophy as "evolutionary rather than revolutionary." Egypt does not have to hold free elections tomorrow, he said, but it could make a start by not throwing prominent human rights activists in jail.

For the Arab world not to change at all, Wolfowitz said, is "a formula for eventual catastrophe."
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Old 05-13-2007, 12:40 PM   #5 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by host
Below is support for the opinion that Wolfowitz has been right less often than a broken clock. WTF is he doing in his present job?
If there really is a GWOT, how can this account about his girlfriend, be explained?
Watch what they do, not what they say.....
The bolded is a fantastic question, one that really deserves asking.

Here's another one: Why hasn't Wolfowitz gone down in flames yet? I'm waiting for it. The guy failed to do his job. I hope the Europeans stick with their intention of either forcing him to resign or face the humiliation of a no-confidence vote. It seems to me that Wolfowitz is dragging his heels, when frankly he would have been better off facing the music.
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