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Neo-Conservatism, Hard Core
IPS News ^ | Jan 12, 2004 | Jim Lobe

Posted on 01/13/2004 3:59:40 PM PST by Stone Mountain

Neo-Conservatism, Hard Core

Analysis - By Jim Lobe

If hard-core neo-conservatives Richard Perle and David Frum had their way, the Bush administration would be issuing ultimatums on virtually a daily basis.

WASHINGTON, Jan 12 (IPS) - In their new book, 'An End to Evil: How to Win the War on Terror', Perle, the well-connected former chairman of the Defence Policy Board (DPB), and Frum, a former White House speechwriter, call for the administration to, among many other things:

- Actively promote, presumably through direct action, the secession of the oil-rich eastern province of Saudi Arabia, unless the Saudi government provides its ''utmost cooperation in the war on terror'';

- Cut off the flow of oil (from Iraq) and arms supplies to Syria, and pursue suspected ''terrorists'' into its territory, unless Damascus implements a thoroughgoing ''western reorientation'' of its policies, economy and political system;

- Prepare to launch pre-emptive strikes against North Korea's nuclear facilities (although ”we do not know where all these facilities are”), unless Pyongyang immediately surrenders all of its nuclear material, closes its missile bases and agrees to the permanent presence of international inspectors'';

- Explicitly reject the jurisdiction of the United Nations Charter, unless it is amended to accommodate Washington's new strategic doctrine of ''pre-emption'';

- Help ”dissidents” overthrow the government of Iran -- ''the regime must go''.

In what they call a ''manual for victory'', the two authors, both resident fellows at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), describe an extremely dangerous world in which the greatest current evil, ''militant Islam'', can be found everywhere -- from ''Indonesia to Indiana'' (not to mention ''in some remoter areas of Venezuela'', Paraguay, Brazil and northern Nigeria).. The stakes could not be higher.

Militant Islam ”seeks to overthrow our civilisation and remake the nations of the West into Islamic societies imposing on the whole world its religion and law'', write the authors.

Nor do such ambitions represent only a tiny minority of Muslims, as U.S. President George W. Bush himself has contended.

The militants' goals command wide support among Muslims worldwide, including in the United States where the ”loyalty” of U.S. Muslims requires special scrutiny by law enforcement and their fellow-citizens, according to Perle and Frum. ”The roots of Muslim rage are to be found in Islam itself”, they write.

''There is no middle way for Americans'', they warn. ''It is victory or holocaust''.

If all this sounds a little terrifying, it is because Perle and Frum are deeply concerned that the administration's determination -- and that of the country as a whole -- to wage the war on terror to its bitter end is flagging. ''We can feel the will to win ebbing in Washington; we sense the reversion to the bad old habits of complacency and denial''.

This book, then, is designed to re-energise the effort, and must be taken seriously because it no doubt echoes arguments that are currently being made at the highest levels of the Bush administration.

While Frum, who allegedly coined the phrase ''axis of evil'', linking Iraq to Iran and North Korea in Bush's 2002 State of the Union address, is known more for his rhetoric than his foreign-policy expertise, Perle has been a fixture of the national-security policy scene for more than 30 years.

Known as the ''Prince of Darkness'' for his opposition to arms control agreements with the Soviet Union as a senior Pentagon official under former president Ronald Reagan, he has been one of Deputy Defence Secretary Paul Wolfowitz's best friends since 1969, as well as the mentor of Douglas Feith, the ultra-Zionist undersecretary of defence whose office oversaw preparations for the Iraq invasion and the post-war occupation.

A long-time ally of both Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Vice President Dick Cheney, Perle was described by the 'Washington Post' last year as the ''intellectual guru of the hard-line neo-conservative movement in foreign policy'', who enjoys ''profound influence over Bush policies''. It is thus safe to say that Perle's views count, and the fact that he believed already in October -- when the book (published by Random House) went to print -- that the administration was losing its zeal is significant.

Perle and Frum naturally blame the State Department, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), retired military officers and senior officials from the administration of the current president's father -- in other words, all the foreign policy specialists and ''realists'' who initially raised questions about going to war in Iraq -- for resisting their calls for expanding the war to Syria, Iran, North Korea and even Saudi Arabia.

And they categorically reject, albeit often defensively, any notion that the loss in momentum might be due more to over-optimistic predictions by themselves and their friends in the offices of Cheney and Rumsfeld about the ease with which U.S. forces could occupy Iraq without significant international support.

More than once, they insist that if only the White House had installed their hero, Iraqi National Congress (INC) chief Ahmad Chalabi, as president of a provisional government before the invasion, all would be well today.

”Seldom has the foreign policy bureaucracy inflicted such shameful damage on American interests than in its opposition to working with Saddam's Iraqi opponents”, they write.

But the authors fail to note that since he was virtually carried to Baghdad on the shoulders of the invading U.S. forces, Chalabi's main power base does not appear to have expanded much beyond his U.S.-trained militia and his friends back in the Pentagon.

Indeed, a persistent theme in the book is that if Washington really prevails in the war on terror, it will be no thanks to the bureaucrats who run the State Department and the CIA, whose apparatchiks are ”blinded à by the squeamishness that many liberal-minded people feel about noticing the dark side of third-world cultures”.

Hence, CIA Director George Tenet ”has failed. He should go”, while ”we should increase sharply the number of political appointees in the State Department and expand their role”.

Such measures should ease adoption of the neo-conservatives' agenda, which includes not only ultimatums but also simple directives, such as:

- Work fastidiously to isolate France from the rest of Europe while doing ''our utmost to preserve our British ally's strategic independence FROM (emphasis added) Europe'', in part by offering U.K. arms manufacturers preferential treatment, and promoting a Anglo-American defence condominium that would also include Australia and Canada.

- Forge a defence partnership ”with Japan, Australia, and other willing Asian democracies as intimate and enduring as the NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organisation) alliance. China should know that any attempt to bully any of its democratic neighbours will be resisted by all of them -- no ifs, buts or exceptions”.

- ”Cease criticising Israel for taking actions against Hamas and Hezbollah (or similar groups) analogous to those the United States is taking against al-Qaeda à The distinction between Islamic terrorism against Israel, on the one hand, and Islamic terrorism against the United States and Europe, on the other, cannot be sustained.”

- Avoid turning Iraq into a ”ward of the United Nations or the 'international community',” because ”once the international bureaucrats get their hands on society, they never let go”.

This last point is illustrated by a curious list of countries, including Cambodia and Somalia, where the authors apparently believe -- mistakenly -- that the United Nations remains in charge.

That is one of a striking number of factual errors, illustrating either the haste with which the book, which even lacks an index, was put together or simple ignorance on the part of the authors.

They contend, for example, that ”Saudi-inspired extremists” launched wars against Christian communities on Indonesia's Sulawesi and Maluku islands, when they are apparently referring to Laskar Jihad, a militia that most experts believe was not only inspired, but armed, by elements in the country's military.

Frum and Pearle make similar assumptions about the indigenous insurgency in Indonesia's Aceh province and what are predominantly ethnic, rather than religious, clashes in northern Nigeria.

Indeed, much as they invariably attributed Soviet aggression to various nationalist, ethnic and reformist movements during the Cold War, Perle and Frum now seem determined to find a ”militant Muslim” and/or Saudi-Wahabi hand in conflicts or terrorism from Mindanao to Lake Maracaibo.

And just as in the Cold War, they appear to prefer authoritarian to democratic regimes if the latter risks empowering Islamic radicals, as they make clear in yet another directive: ”in the Middle East, democratisation does not mean calling immediate elections and then living with whatever happens next”, they write.

”That was tried in Algeria in 1995 (sic), and it would have brought the Islamic extremists to power as the only available alternative to the corrupt status quo. Democratisation means opening political spaces in which Middle Eastern people can express concrete grievances in ways that bring action to improve their lives.”

While the authors stress that democratisation also requires protecting minorities and women, the message that comes through is that democracy is not their highest priority, the neo-conservatives' frequent protestations to the contrary notwithstanding.

It is clear from recent events -- particularly Bush's criticism of Taiwan, his tentative feelers towards Iran, and his warm words for Libya (”an implacably hostile regime”, according to the authors), as well as the acceleration of the transition timetable in Iraq -- that the neo-cons' influence has waned further in the months since the book was sent to print.

No surprise, really: after watching Bush's poll numbers plummet as U.S. casualties rose beginning last summer, the president's political adviser Karl Rove reportedly issued a directive of his own several months ago: ”No war in '04”, an election year.

The neo-cons might be down but they are most certainly not out. They and their administration allies, notably Cheney, have shown they retain sufficient influence for now to prevent any major softening in the hard lines on North Korea and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

If Bush wins a second term with Cheney at his side, neo-conservatives like Perle might well find themselves back on top. If so, you may be able to buy this book on remainder and use it as a scorecard.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: anendtoevil; bookreview; davidfrum; endtoevil; hawks; neocons; richardperle
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To: Zipporah
This is what I'd like to see the President do. Take care of americ a 1st.

"The National Population Council reported that 9.9 million Mexicans call America home and that more than 7.82 million of those - or 79 percent - do not have U.S. citizenship. It did not break down how many had legal residence papers."

"According to a RoperASW poll from last year, 83 percent of Americans support mandatory detention and forfeiture of property for illegal immigrants, followed by deportation."

I'm one of the 83%.

If the President Bush or Tom Ridge would announce that in six months they will be paying a $50 per head bounty for each illegal alien on American soil there would be a mad rush for the borders.

A policeman in a car costs the average city about $200 an hour. Helicopters cost at least $2000 an hour with the ground crews. What is the full cost of a teacher per hour? $140.00 or there about.

If we could get illegal aliens to turn each other in, just the ones trying to slip through the net, (I know thousands would attempt it) we would save billions in law enforcement, welfare programs, unemployment, medical care, job training and schools the first year.

Do all this under Executive Order and tell the Courts to back off. This is national security!

Any employer who has employed an illegal alien more than five months from the announcement date will be fined $5000 per employee. One month later enforcement begins. This will give employers 5 months to shed the illegals and hire legally papered actual American citizens.

Then on the announced date, start in a state such as Oklahoma. Well centered, not overly populated and clean the state out. This would give Homeland, INS and Border Patrol time to install their co-agents in various court houses around the country to verify a persons paperwork, i.e.. birth certificates, hospital records, etc.

Go state to state from the epicenter sweeping out the criminals who have successfully avoided suspicion. They already had 5 months to get out, hanging around to test the system carries a SEVERE penalty. They won't be able to say they weren't warned.

Divide a state into quadrants depending on population per square mile., First arrest those whose names were turn in for the bounty. Then others suspected by local law agencies. When arrests slow down, open an adjoining quadrant.

Get caught after the selected dated and the result would be every foreign national who is not in America legally would forfeit all their belongings (houses, cars, bank accounts, etc.) and be deported within 24 hours. These forfeited belongings would then be given to local churches for distribution to the needy in that community. Another cost saver!

This enforcement would apply to illegals from every country in the world, not just Mexico.

Imagine the number of Chinese who would be taking the ship home with everything in the house, new cars, you name it would be on those ships. The thousands of Canadians who decided the USA was better than Canada would be again headed North.

How many schools could be closed? How many hospitals and state paid housing tracts? How many welfare offices? How many planned jail enlargements could be stopped for lack of need?

How many state and federal employees would find out that they have the time to actually give good service to their American customers?

Oh yes, it would be an economic shocker in the amount of taxes that could be reduced or used to actually improve something needed for American citizens, instead of illegal foreigners.

Want an approximate number of the population drop? Try 50 million+ with the majority over 30 years of age, having been illegal residents of America for over ten years.

I've always wondered how many folks are on Medicare that don't deserve it. I'll bet that would save a big chuink of money that could be used for American war veterans and citizens health problems.

Just imagine the frantic squealing from our politicians thinking of the lost votes and contributions. That would be a sideshow worth watching!

Scan the whole page for good reading!
Conservative Debate Handbook

21 posted on 01/14/2004 11:58:48 AM PST by B4Ranch (Wave your flag, don't waive your rights!)
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To: St.Chuck
I didn't say that Frum was a national defence expert but that he is a conservative serious about national defence. His and Perle's positions are in direct line with conservative anti-communism of the Cold War -- the people who wanted roll-back and victory, not containment or detente. People like Ronald Reagan.

Perle obviously is the expert and Frum the one who can express ideas clearly and directly to a popular audience. A reasonable way to write a book.

As for "victory or holocaust," I would think that the most elementary lesson of the 20th century would be that when people say they want a holocaust they might just mean it. Is your constrasting position something like "Better Red than Dead"?

22 posted on 01/17/2004 4:58:10 PM PST by Southern Federalist
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