'This
is garbage from right-wing
think-tanks stuffed with
chicken-hawks -- men who have
never seen the horror of war
but are in love with the idea
of war.
-- Tom Dalyell, British Labour
Member of Parliament |
[Scottish
Sunday
Herald] Sunday, September 15, 2002 Bush
planned Iraq 'regime change' before
becoming President By Neil Mackay A SECRET blueprint for
US global domination reveals that
President Bush and his cabinet were
planning a premeditated attack on Iraq to
secure 'regime change' even before he took
power in January 2001. The blueprint, uncovered by the
Sunday Herald, for the creation of
a 'global Pax Americana' was drawn up for
Dick Cheney (now vice- president),
Donald Rumsfeld (defence
secretary), Paul Wolfowitz
(Rumsfeld's deputy), George W
Bush's younger brother Jeb and
Lewis Libby (Cheney's chief of
staff). The document, entitled Rebuilding
America's Defences: Strategies, Forces And
Resources For A New Century, was written
in September 2000 by the neo-conservative
think-tank Project for the New American
Century (PNAC). The plan shows Bush's cabinet intended
to take military control of the Gulf
region whether or not Saddam
Hussein was in power. It says: 'The
United States has for decades sought to
play a more permanent role in Gulf
regional security. While the unresolved
conflict with Iraq provides the immediate
justification, the need for a substantial
American force presence in the Gulf
transcends the issue of the regime of
Saddam Hussein.' The PNAC document supports a 'blueprint
for maintaining global US pre-eminence,
precluding the rise of a great power
rival, and shaping the international
security order in line with American
principles and interests'. This 'American grand strategy' must be
advanced for 'as far into the future as
possible', the report says. It also calls
for the US to 'fight and decisively win
multiple, simultaneous major theatre wars'
as a 'core mission'. The report describes American armed
forces abroad as 'the cavalry on the new
American frontier'. The PNAC blueprint
supports an earlier document written by
Wolfowitz and Libby that said the US must
'discourage advanced industrial nations
from challenging our leadership or even
aspiring to a larger regional or global
role'. The PNAC report also: - refers to key allies such as the UK
as 'the most effective and efficient
means of exercising American global
leadership';
- describes peace-keeping missions as
'demanding American political
leadership rather than that of the
United Nations';
- reveals worries in the
administration that Europe could rival
the USA;
- says 'even should Saddam pass from
the scene' bases in Saudi Arabia and
Kuwait will remain permanently --
despite domestic opposition in the Gulf
regimes to the stationing of US troops
-- as 'Iran may well prove as large a
threat to US interests as Iraq
has';
- spotlights China for 'regime
change' saying 'it is time to increase
the presence of American forces in
southeast Asia'. This, it says, may
lead to 'American and allied power
providing the spur to the process of
democratisation in China';
- calls for the creation of 'US Space
Forces', to dominate space, and the
total control of cyberspace to prevent
'enemies' using the internet against
the US;
- hints that, despite threatening war
against Iraq for developing weapons of
mass destruction, the US may consider
developing biological weapons -- which
the nation has banned -- in decades to
come. It says: 'New methods of attack
-- electronic, 'non-lethal', biological
-- will be more widely available ...
combat likely will take place in new
dimensions, in space, cyberspace, and
perhaps the world of microbes ...
advanced forms of biological warfare
that can 'target' specific genotypes
may transform biological warfare from
the realm of terror to a politically
useful tool';
- and pinpoints North Korea, Libya,
Syria and Iran as dangerous regimes and
says their existence justifies the
creation of a 'world-wide
command-and-control system'.
Tam Dalyell, the Labour MP,
father of the House of Commons and one of
the leading rebel voices against war with
Iraq, said: 'This is garbage from
right-wing think-tanks stuffed with
chicken-hawks -- men who have never
seen the horror of war but are in love
with the idea of war. Men like Cheney,
who were draft-dodgers in the Vietnam
war.'This is a blueprint for US world
domination -- a new world order of
their making. These are the thought
processes of fantasist Americans who
want to control the world. I am
appalled that a British Labour Prime
Minister should have got into bed with
a crew which has this moral
standing".
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