Posted on 03/18/2016 9:57:52 PM PDT by VitacoreVision
In a statement released on March 17, the campaign of presidential candidate Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) announced a high-profile national security coalition that will advise Cruz (shown) on foreign policy issues. The announcement spotlighted three members of the team former Senator Jim Talent (R-Mo.), former federal prosecutor Andrew McCarthy, and former Assistant Secretary of State Elliott Abrams.
Of these, Abrams is the most problematic for constitutional conservatives, who are Cruzs staunchest supporters, since Abrams is the very personification of the Washington establishment that Cruz has frequently condemned.
The biographical information for Abrams offered in the Cruz announcement notes:
Elliott Abrams was an assistant secretary of state in the Reagan administration and a deputy national security advisor in the George W. Bush administration; he is a senior fellow for Middle Eastern Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations.
Apparently, the Cruz campaign believes (perhaps justifiably so) that so few conservatives know anything about the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) that it is no longer considered to be politically risky for a conservative, self-proclaimed anti-establishment candidate to openly place a man who is not merely a CFR member but a CFR senior fellow in a prominent slot.
Maybe Christian economist Gary North was correct about the relative obscurity of the CFR when he wrote in a column for LewRockwell.com four years ago:
The story of the CFR is well known to those of us who have been in the conservative wing of the party for over 50 years. It has been over half a century since Dan Smoot wrote The Invisible Government (1960). In late 1964, Robert Welch of the John Birch Society shifted his entire lifes work from anti-Communism to anti-conspiracy, and forced the restructuring of the Birch Societys magazine, American Opinion. The story of the CFR/Federal Reserve alliance has been known to the hard-core Right for a generation. But it is still not known to the standard conservative, who came into the movement in 1980 or later. [Emphasis added.]
We will get back to the CFR shortly, and also look at some of the other members of Cruzs new National Security Team. This statement from Cruz was included in the announcement:
I am honored and humbled to have a range of respected voices willing to offer their best advice. These are trusted friends who will form a core of our broader national security team. After two terms of a failed Obama-Clinton foreign policy, our allies are confused and frightened, and our enemies are looking for opportunities. This is the moment for all those who believe in a strong America that is secure at home and respected abroad to come together and craft a new path forward.
Chad Sweet, a former DHS and CIA official and chairman of the Ted Cruz for President Campaign, said of the new advisors: The national security experts who are endorsing him today are all highly respected professionals who share Senator Cruzs vision of how we will restore Americas leadership in the world.
Of the two other members of Cruzs new team mentioned prominently in the announcement, Talent was a foreign policy advisor to Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney during his failed 2012 campaign and was perhaps the only Romney advisor with any type of conservative credentials, serving as a distinguished fellow at the Heritage Foundation.
The other, Andrew McCarthy, a former assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, is a contributing editor to the neoconservative journal National Review. Back in 2012, McCarthy rashly criticized The New American for our exposé of the attacks on liberty posed by the extraordinary power granted the president of the United States by the NDAA (National Defense Authorization Act). (A complete account of McCarthys attack on The New American is found in the article: Is The New American Absurd to Expose the NDAA? One Writer Says Yes.)
Two other members of the team are also CFR members:
Stewart Baker, who served as assistant secretary for policy at DHS, as general counsel of the National Security Agency, and as general counsel of the bipartisan commission that investigated intelligence failures involving WMD and Iraq, and
Michael Pillsbury, who was a Reagan campaign advisor in 1980, served as assistant undersecretary of defense for policy planning under President Reagan, and is the author of three books on China.
The others represent varying degrees of conservatism or neo-conservatism. A representative sampling includes:
Ilan Berman, vice president of the American Foreign Policy Council, which includes on its board of directors, Robert McFarlane, former national security advisor to Ronald Reagan, who is a CFR member, and Newt Gingrich, former speaker of the House and a CFR member.
Mike Gonzalez, a former speechwriter for the Bush administration and editorial writer for the Wall Street Journal, Charles Cully Stimson, a former deputy assistant secretary of defense for Detainee Affairs, and Steven Groves are fellows at the Heritage Foundation, giving them conservative credentials they share with Jim Talent.
Mary Habeck is a visiting scholar at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), where she studies al-Qaeda, ISIS, and jihadi-salafism. AEI is regarded by many as the most influential think tank associated with neoconservatism. Irving Kristol, the godfather of neoconservatism, was a senior fellow at AEI.
While some members of the Cruz advisory team, especially those associated with the Heritage Foundation, genuinely qualify as conservatives, the presence of CFR members Abrams, Baker, and Pillsbury does seem to be a larger number than mere coincidence might suggest.
As for why the presence of these CFR members should concern Cruzs constitutionally conservative supporters, it is necessary to expand on Norths statement quoted above: The story of the CFR is well known to those of us who have been in the conservative wing of the party for over 50 years: To provide a condensed version of that story, it is necessary to go back to the time of the CFRs founding, in 1921. The beginnings of the CFR originated in the closing years of World War I, when President Woodrow Wilson commissioned a group of about 150 scholars called The Inquiry to develop a plan for the world after the defeat of Germany. A key part of this plan was the creation of a League of Nations. However, the U.S. Senate, fearful that membership in such a world body would threaten U.S. sovereignty, voted to reject membership in the league on November 19, 1919.
In an attempt to further Wilsons aims, members of the international group of scholars formed the CFR in New York on July 29, 1921. Following World War II, CFR members were instrumental in forming the United Nations to replace the League of Nations, and this time were successful in getting the United States to enter this world body. Since then, CFR members have become very influential in steering the course of U.S. foreign policy in an internationalist, interventionist direction, and it members have occupied key Cabinet positions in both Democratic and Republican administrations. CFR members have included political leaders from both parties, more than a dozen secretaries of state, CIA and national security directors, and leading financial, academic, and media figures.
For an illustrative example of how thorough the CFR influence is, we must consider the answer that Donald Trump gave when he was asked by Moderator Bret Baier during the March 3 presidential debate;
Mr. Trump, you've repeatedly deflected calls for specific national security or defense policy plans with the claim that you'll ask the best people when you become president, and take their advice.
So who are the best people? Can you reveal two or three names that you trust for national security?
Trump replied:
I think Richard Haass is excellent. I have a lot of respect for him. I think General Keane is excellent. I think that there are I like Colonel Jacobs very much. I see him. I know him. I have many people that I think are really excellent but in the end its going to be my decision.
Trump, therefore, named three people he would seek foreign policy advice from. Of these, Richard Haass is in his 13th year as president of the Council on Foreign Relations.
The second man Trump named, John M. Jack Keane, is a retired four-star general and former vice chief of staff of the U.S. Army. He is now a defense analyst currently serving as chairman of the board for the Institute for the Study of War. Keene is also a CFR member.
Trumps third choice, Jack Howard Jacobs, is a retired U.S. Army colonel who currently serves as a military analyst for NBC News and MSNBC. And Jacobs, like the others, is a CFR member.
In the upcoming presidential election, therefore, we will likely see either Trump or Cruz as the GOP nominee, and both men have sought out the advice of CFR members. Cruzs wife, Heidi, was also a CFR member and also was a member of the task force that was tapped by the CFR to analyze the proposals for the establishment of a North American Union.
As for the presumptive Democratic nominee, Hillary Clinton, her husband the former president, Bill, is a CFR member, as is their daughter, Chelsea.
A suspicious voter might easily think that the deck is stacked for the upcoming election, only instead of being filled with extra aces, it is filled with extra CFR cards.
Related articles:
Trump, Cruz, and the Establishment
TPP Power Grab: World Bank, Goldman Sachs, CFR
CFR Globalists Outline Strategy for North American Community
It’s hard to beat Trump’s team of “I watch tv news.”
Jeff Sessions is a hillbilly, just listen to the drawl. -sarc
I’m an outsider
Outside of everything...
A left over neo-con artist from the Reagan and Bush1 administrations. Involved in the Iran-Contra Affair. Norman Podhoretz son in law. Just another indication how deep Cruz is in with the establishment, and a phony “outsider.”
Cruz looks more and more like a standard issue Neo-Con
...
Jack Black: Cruz looks more and more like a standard issue Neo-Con
...
Yep. Flashback:
Ted Cruz’s Closest Counselors Are Neocons
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/3391179/posts
15 October 2015
Cruz is shaping up well as a proxy for the NWO bush clan. The !JEB¡ and rube campaigns were just smoke and mirrors.
I was wondering who the stalking horse in this race was going to be, now I know for sure.
Yeah. He’s an outsider/fierce neo-con.
Most Americans have had their ration of those children-of-former-commie brainiacs.
Another Whammo! move by the Cubanadian. Trump wins again.
Wake up cruzbots!
Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, Jeff Sessions....both advising Trump.
Flynn said Trump is very smart and a really good listener.
Yawn. Elliott Abrams?
Pretraus was on Maria Bartilomo’s show tonight. Definitely he is a TRUMP supporter. I had no doubt he has talked to Donald.
I expect General Mike Flynn to be the ace in the hole, also, soon enough.
When Jeff lines them up, they will be TRUMP worthy and excellent.
(They also won’t be Establishment, thankfully.)
Does not surprise me. Cruz is a globalist and a corporatist. It is compatible with Dominionism as far s I can tell.
These people are clever. Their agenda is NOT for the common good, but for themselves and their fellow greedies. Oh, they may subjectively tell themselves it is good for all, but deep down they should have a twinge of conscience. It is not a good thing to take to oneself power and money at great expense to ones neighbors.
But they know what sells to get elected. The Constitution on Ted’s part covers a multitude of globalist sins such and NAU and TPP and increased immigration.
But along came Trump and the veil was lifted from this black hearted plot.
I hope that God will bless America and help to restore her to her former glory under His name.
So I guess we’re not allowed to have people with national experience then?
You keep saying “establishment”. I do not think you know what that means...
Teddy has been completely establishment since 2000. The only time he hasn’t been is when he plays an outsider while campaigning. Mitt put that on full display today, along with Teddy hiring Neil Bush and the whole Bush finance team.
How many establishment hacks does it take for the Cruzlims to see they’ve been lied to all along?
>>> a really good listener.
Yeah, that’s what everyone says about the Donald.
:)
Well said.
+100.
Ted Cruz has lost control of his campaign to the GOPe. He’s sold out for something and they are calling all the shots.
One thing for sure. If you want to know where ALL the Washington bodies are buried, Abrams is your guy.
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