Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

MAD DOGS OF WAR - Neocon pit-bulls snarl at Syria: 'You're next!'
Antiwar.com ^ | 5/7/03 | Justin Raimondo

Posted on 05/07/2003 11:21:25 AM PDT by Antiwar Republican

May 7, 2003

MAD DOGS OF WAR
Neocon pit-bulls snarl at Syria: 'You're next!'

The mad dogs of war, unleashed by George W. Bush, are baying and barking up a storm. The War Party isn't resting on its laurels. The conquest of Iraq had hardly been celebrated by our President, as he landed on an aircraft carrier in a fighter jet and bounded out to meet his cheering Praetorians, when the cry for an encore was heard:

"President Bush is committed, pretty far down the road. The logic of events says you can't go halfway. You can't liberate Iraq, then quit."

That's the little Lenin of the neocons, Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol. In spite of the story being bruited about that Condolezza Rice reined in the gung-ho guys in the Pentagon at the last moment and barely avoided a U.S. invasion of Syria � the White House is denying it � Kristol is right. George the Great can hardly contain his own Greatness within the arbitrary boundaries drawn by the British Foreign Office on the map of the Middle East. The incision has been made, and the Bushies have no choice but to keep operating, whether they like it or not. Bush implied as much in his speech to the troops, as he strutted about in his flight suit, his helmet tucked neatly under his arm:

"The battle of Iraq is one victory in a war on terror that began on September the 11, 2001 – and still goes on. � Any outlaw regime that has ties to terrorist groups and seeks or possesses weapons of mass destruction is a grave danger to the civilized world – and will be confronted."

Translation: Syria � you're next!

A "terrorist" is not just a member of Al Qaeda, in the Bushian lexicon: now Hezbollah, Hamas, the Palestinians, the Syrians, the Shi'ite groups in Iraq that sympathize with the Iranian regime � all are in the sights of this administration, which has initiated a new kind of urban renewal project in the region. After the bulldozers do their work, a new Middle East is supposed to rise out of the rubble � one that is "democratic," secular, and could easily be mistaken for the Middle Western areas of the good old United States � like those American compounds in Saudi Arabia. But does anyone really believe for a minute that Iraq can be turned into, say, Arizona? This "democratization" campaign is a crock. Something else is going on here....

An "outlaw regime" is, potentially, any and all Middle Eastern governments with the glaring exception of Israel, the one nation in the region that we knowhas nuclear weapons and much else. We know because we paid for them. While we question captured Iraqi scientists searching frantically for evidence of Iraq's legendary "weapons of mass destruction," Mordecai Vanunu sits in an Israel maximum-security prison in solitary confinement, having spent 12 of his 18 year sentence in solitary confinement. He was imprisoned after being kidnapped by the Mossad off a London street for revealing the truth about Israel's nuclear weapons.

But this is not hypocrisy: Israel, you see, is a "democracy." Never mind that its Palestinian helots are dispossessed of their land and disenfranchised as well. The hallmark and guiding principle of U.S. policy in the region is simple: one standard for the Arabs, and another one for the Israelis.

Bashar al Assad found this out when tried to explain to Colin Powell why Israel, too, must get rid of its WMD. Powell's response to the Syrian suggestion that the U.S. back their proposed UN resolution to rid the entire Middle East of nukes and other WMD, submitted to the Security Council on Friday, was to reject out of hand the principle of evenhandedness:

"Clearing such weapons from the region is a long-standing U.S. goal, but now is not the time to address that matter," is how Ha'aretz characterized his attitude.

Translation:

"Shut the f*** up, get your hands out where I can see them, and get down on the ground!"

The Syrians know what's up: Assad rushed to assure Powell that anti-Israel groups headquartered in Damascus would be expelled. But the Israelis and their "free Lebanon" contingent have been raising doubts about how much control the Syrian President has over his own country, and now that meme has made it into this New York Times op ed piece written by a CIA analyst:

"Mr. Assad was only 34 when he became president upon the death of his father, Hafez, in June 2000. Until then, most of his political career had been spent as head of the government-run Syrian Computer Society. Still encumbered by several of his father's key advisers, he does not yet have the standing to make fundamental changes in policy on his own. One has only to observe the Syrian president in meetings where he is accompanied by his foreign minister (in office since 1984) or his vice president (a key regime figure since the 1970's) to appreciate the constraints he faces."

Meanwhile, Hezbollah and other anti-Israeli guerrilla groups are asking: "What 'crackdown'?"

"There are consequences lurking in the background," growled Powell on the Sunday morning talk show circuit. The President will "have all his options on the table" if Syria doesn't hop to it. Are we talkin' war? Powell's answer: "There are many ways to confront a nation." Yes, and our neocons know each and every one of them, including sanctions, a propaganda war, and a new selection in the Hitler of the Month Club.

What is lurking in the background is the neocon network that has burrowed its way up to the highest levels of this administration and is on a roll. These guys aren't going to miss their opportunity to raise the banner of Imperial America in the Middle East � and, incidentally, smite Israel's enemies in one fell swoop – before the American public catches on to their game. As CIA analyst Flynt Leverett relates:

"The military victory over Saddam Hussein's regime has empowered some officials in the Bush administration to push for similarly decisive action against other state sponsors of terrorism. For the hardliners, Syria has become the preferred next target in the war on terrorism. I know because I've been hearing the argument a lot in recent days. For the last eight years, I have been directly involved in United States policymaking toward Syria, as a CIA analyst, on the State Department's policy planning staff and at the White House. In all that time, I have never seen officials as willing to take on the Syrian regime as they are today."

No longer even bothering to hide their Likudnik loyalties, Bush's top advisors on the wrong side of the Powell-Rumsfeld divide are plumbing for war. Newt Gingrich's blast at Powell's "ludicrous" trip to Damascus was just the first salvo. The Secretary of State was quite right in his reply: the President was the real target of the Newtster's ire. Gingrich's diatribe was a shot across the bow at the first sign of hesitation by George the Conqueror in pressing on with what the more maniacal neocons gleefully refer to as "World War IV." Get on with it, George � or else.

On the Iranian front, the threat to "isolate" Teheran is a hollow one: it is the United States that is being isolated, as an American viceroy appoints a largely secular civilian junta dominated by Iraqi exiles to build a nation where the imams rule. How is it "isolating" the Iranians to invite the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), armed and trained by Teheran, into the new Iraqi "interim" government?

Powell's bluster is a smokescreen for what amounts to a de facto US-Iranian alliance: after all, the Americans knocked off Iran's principal enemy, and immediately turned their sights on Syria. Rumors that the Iranians promised to allow the use of their airspace for the attack on Iraq may not have been entirely unfounded. In any case, a January trip by Assad to Teheran was cancelled at the last minute, and Syrian-Iranian relations, never all that cordial to begin with, have never been worse. If the Americans amputate the Syrian wing of the secularist Ba'ath party, Iran's ayatollahs won't shed a tear, nor will the Turks, who have outstanding issues with Damascus. When it comes Syria's turn to be "liberated" from its sovereignty, the Turkish parliament may prove far more cooperative with Washington. Syria is surrounded by enemies, and it is only a matter of time before they pounce – with the U.S. leading the way.

Seen as a grand-scale replication of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the invasion and occupation of Iraq begins to make at least some kind of twisted sense. The goal of U.S. war plans in the region, like the strategic thrust of Israel's fight against the Palestinians, is to destroy the secular-modern Arab entities � the Ba'athists of Iraq and Syria � just as the Israelis trained their fire on the PLO, and encouraged the development of religious rivals to Arafat, even going so far as to fund the early growth of Hamas.

Ever since Bashar al Assad succeeded his father, the Israelis have feared a U.S. rapprochement with Syria: the former London-based opthamologist is Hafez al Assad's second son, and never intended to inherit his father's power. But the death of the family's first-born male heir, Basil, thrust him into the leadership. Bashar started out as a reformer, and hopes were high, but the reforms were stalled by the resistance of the Ba'athist old guard. Now the news that the Syrian President had offered to negotiate directly with the Israelis before the invasion of Iraq lends credence to his reputed willingness to compromise and break the logjam blocking Middle East peace. Naturally, Ariel Sharon rejected the offer. Why should the Israeli Prime Minister bother talking with Assad when he can send his American errand boy to do the job?

Not that there is anything for Syria to negotiate � except the terms of its surrender.

As the pretexts for Gulf War II are torpedoed, one by one, the real reason for the invasion of Iraq becomes more obvious with each passing day. As "weapons of mass destruction" fail to turn up, and the fabled Al Qaeda-Iraq link is less convincing than ever, the swiftness of the American victory underscores the reality that Saddam never was a military threat to begin with, either to his neighbors or to us. What, then, was the point of this war?

In 1996, Richard Perle, James Colbert, Charles Fairbanks, Jr., Douglas Feith, Robert Loewenberg, David Wurmser, and Meyrav Wurmser collaborated on a policy paper for then-Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, which declared "A Clean Break" with the "defensive" strategies of the past:

"Israel can shape its strategic environment, in cooperation with Turkey and Jordan, by weakening, containing, and even rolling back Syria. This effort can focus on removing Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq � an important Israeli strategic objective in its own right � as a means of foiling Syria's regional ambitions."

The Israelis, and their American amen corner, have always understood that the road to Damascus runs through Baghdad. As the authors of "A Clean Break" presciently put it:

"Syria enters this conflict with potential weaknesses: Damascus is too preoccupied with dealing with the threatened new regional equation to permit distractions of the Lebanese flank. And Damascus fears that the 'natural axis' with Israel on one side, central Iraq and Turkey on the other, and Jordan, in the center would squeeze and detach Syria from the Saudi Peninsula. For Syria, this could be the prelude to a redrawing of the map of the Middle East which would threaten Syria's territorial integrity."

That not a few of the authors of this policy paper are now high officials in charge of directing America's foreign policy means that this strategy can now by implemented � by the U.S. government.

That's what the invasion of Iraq was all about. Syria was always the real target of "Operation Iraqi Freedom," and this post-war diplomatic dance with Damascus confirms it. As Pat Buchanan put it in The American Conservative:

"We charge that a cabal of polemicists and public officials seek to ensnare our country in a series of wars that are not in America's interests. We charge them with colluding with Israel to ignite those wars and destroy the Oslo Accords. We charge them with deliberately damaging U.S. relations with every state in the Arab world that defies Israel or supports the Palestinian people's right to a homeland of their own. We charge that they have alienated friends and allies all over the Islamic and Western world through their arrogance, hubris, and bellicosity."

Will this same gang of warmongers entrap us in a war with Syria, and drag us back into Lebanon, where we are sure to confront the ghosts of our past errors? The battle-cry has already been sounded: Stay tuned as we hear news of Syria's "weapons of mass destruction" and the inevitable question: "Is Saddam in Syria?"

As Yogi Berra once said: "This is like deja-vu all over again!"



TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: axisofweasels; bush; elbaradei; flamebait; iaea; israel; kneejerky; neoeunazis; syria; traitor; treason; vanunu
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-80 ... 101-119 next last
To: Mr. Mojo
How about if only Israel has beaches?


41 posted on 05/07/2003 12:07:21 PM PDT by ASA Vet ("Those who know, don't talk. Those who talk, don't know." (I'm in the 2nd group.))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

To: Mr. Mojo
How about if Israel has beaches all the way around?


42 posted on 05/07/2003 12:08:44 PM PDT by ASA Vet ("Those who know, don't talk. Those who talk, don't know." (I'm in the 2nd group.))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

To: JohnGalt
I think Rummy will retire with 'health issues' if this disloyal rift can be exploited.

It's already over. Only isolationist paleos like Fleming want to get rid of Rumsfeld.

You libertarians can't catch a break, can you?

43 posted on 05/07/2003 12:10:02 PM PDT by sinkspur
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 39 | View Replies]

To: sinkspur
Actually, my neo-isolationist friend, I think it was your side who advocated 'Britian and America versus the world'.


44 posted on 05/07/2003 12:13:27 PM PDT by JohnGalt (They're All Lying)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 43 | View Replies]

To: JohnGalt
Actually, my neo-isolationist friend, I think it was your side who advocated 'Britian and America versus the world'.

Actually, it was Britain, America, and 47 other countries against Russia, Germany and France (three aiders and abettors of Saddam Hussein). The three pipsqueaks lost.

45 posted on 05/07/2003 12:15:42 PM PDT by sinkspur
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 44 | View Replies]

To: Antiwar Republican
The ideological garbage subtracted what is so bad about what is being said here. The elimination of the Assad-Baath regime in Damascus would bring tears to the eyes of those who are content with Syria being able to keep a substantial part of the IDF permanently tied up covering the nortern frontier. The squelching of the Assad regime and the subsequent demise of Hamas and Hizbollah in Lebanon are cause and effect related actions. The final domino in this sequence is the so called Palestine Authority. Shorn of protectors its ability to continue to orchestrate violence also dries up and the Israelis have more than enough muscle to effectivelt tame Paliland for good. A very tame Pali entity that knows better than to even think of annoying the Israelis would be a pleasant final endstate bring down the curtain on the endless Plai terror war. So what is so bad with this scenario? Except if you want the Arabs to win since you viscerally hate both the US and Israel.
46 posted on 05/07/2003 12:18:24 PM PDT by robowombat
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: robowombat
Or if you are a conservative, you believe the government should make its case for war and get a declaration of war to secure the stated end.

Otherwise its just a political scheme hatched up by Ivy League tea sippers willing to put their neighbor's kid in harms way.

But I understand, there are a lot of Wilsonian liberals coming to this site these days...
47 posted on 05/07/2003 12:21:52 PM PDT by JohnGalt (They're All Lying)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 46 | View Replies]

To: sinkspur
Hard to tell they lost from the currency markets...
48 posted on 05/07/2003 12:23:15 PM PDT by JohnGalt (They're All Lying)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 45 | View Replies]

To: Antiwar Republican
Monsieur Raimondo seems to be le petit chien howling at the Moon.

Not a Dog of War, but a Dog of Yap.
49 posted on 05/07/2003 12:26:11 PM PDT by headsonpikes
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

President Bush is committed, pretty far down the road. The logic of events says you can't go halfway. You can't liberate Iraq, then quit."
Context is your friend, Justin.

Kristol has explained himself several times, such as his appearance in Nightline a couple of weeks ago.

He just means that the Iraqi war opened the floodgates of democracy and anti-terrorism in the region.

He does not anticipate another war during Bush's first term; quite the contrary, he expects the Syrians to clean up their act, the Iranian mullahs to be defeated from the inside, and the Saudi Arabia princes to experiment with a limited constitutional monarchy.

50 posted on 05/07/2003 12:26:54 PM PDT by george wythe
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 45 | View Replies]

To: Antiwar Republican
One of the clues to the somewhat mysterious abuse of the neologism "neocon" is precisely who is abusing it. This is an example. I do not mean that in a kind way.
51 posted on 05/07/2003 12:30:29 PM PDT by Billthedrill
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: sinkspur
Actually, it was Britain, America, and 47 other countries against Russia, Germany and France (three aiders and abettors of Saddam Hussein). The three pipsqueaks lost.

Four pipsqueaks, you forgot Belgium

52 posted on 05/07/2003 12:33:35 PM PDT by NeoCaveman (Belgium is France's mimi-me)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 45 | View Replies]

To: BlackElk
For your amusement
53 posted on 05/07/2003 12:33:50 PM PDT by Chancellor Palpatine
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Redcloak
Justine won't be interested in that pic at all. He only gets a rush from a nice pic of Barney Frank.
54 posted on 05/07/2003 12:35:07 PM PDT by Chancellor Palpatine (keep the Anna pics coming)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 30 | View Replies]

To: JohnGalt
Or if you are a conservative, you believe the government should make its case for war and get a declaration of war to secure the stated end.

While a declaration of war is ideal, conservatives know their history. Accordingly, they know that military action between the United States and foreign powers have been undeclared since John Adams and the Quasi-War with France. Innumerable examples of the same are rife throughout American history. Secondly, the case was made to the American public. The link between the anti-western tyrannies of the Middle East, be they jihadist or pan-Arab secularist, is a story as old as most of the countries involved (for example, see former Lebanon CIA officer Robert Baer's "See No Evil" on how these terrrorist groups and nations work together on a regular basis). It was a linkage rejected only by those who expected the administration to produce a hand-written note reading, "Dear Saddam, I love working with you and Assad to kill Crusaders and Zionists. Hugs & Kisses, Osama"

The denial of this linkage undertaken by administration critics reminds one of Dr. Samuel Johnson demonstrating to Boswell how Boswell could not prove the existence of Canada to Johnson if Johnson chose not to believe him.

Otherwise its just a political scheme hatched up by Ivy League tea sippers willing to put their neighbour's kids in harm's way.

Having graduated from an Ivy League, and grown up in a town with an Ivy League university, I can assure you that there aren't enough militaristic Ivy Leaguers to fill a mini-van. To ascribe malign intent to such a non-existent cabal is little more than a profession of ignorance and desperation. As for Rummy, he was a US Navy pilot, so I think he was willing to put his ass on the line for others. I bet you if you asked the men and women in today's military, they would be more than happy to put their asses on the line for him.

Moreover, the libertarian line that anything done by the government is something done by "the Establishment" with other people's lives and money is getting stale. If Bush's team finds war easier because it is fought by other people's kids, then you find pompous moral posturing to be easy because you hide behind the courage and bravery of others. So it goes.

I understand where you are coming from, as I am a registered Libertarian. I voted Libertarian since coming of voting age until the 2000 election. The end of the Cold War meant a more dangerous world, and the Libertarians have not been realistic about the tough measures that must be taken to protect this nation. Our good buddies in the Islamic understand two things: Cold steel and hot lead. Anything else is interpreted by them as cowardice, and only encourages them to further acts of violence. Murdered American innocents are the unacceptable result of passivity and petty moralizing. It ain't pretty, but it is reality.

55 posted on 05/07/2003 12:52:11 PM PDT by Seydlitz
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 47 | View Replies]

To: Constitution Day; Poohbah; Chancellor Palpatine; Catspaw; Billthedrill; Alouette; BlueLancer; ...

Smash All Zionist-Devil Neocon Running Mad-Dog Pit Bulls!

56 posted on 05/07/2003 1:09:19 PM PDT by dighton (Amen-Corner Hatchet Team, Nasty Little Clique, Vulgar Horde)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 10 | View Replies]

To: Chancellor Palpatine; Poohbah; dighton
What a lot of ranting and raving.

And it's all those dreadful, all-powerful "neo-cons" that are the problem.

Dreadful? Hell, all they are doing is advocating policies in conjunction of what most Americans think ought to be done after 9/11: Stay strong, hit back, and STOP APOLOGIZING.

All-powerful? *snort* If we neo-conservatives WERE, let's just say a whole lotta terrorist-sponsoring regime would not be there any more, for starters.

Mr. Raimondo just doesn't get it. The neo-conservatives are powerful because they are RIGHT, not the other way around.
57 posted on 05/07/2003 1:13:25 PM PDT by hchutch (America came, America saw, America liberated; as for those who hate us, Oderint dum Metuant)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 54 | View Replies]

To: Seydlitz
Spot on post.
58 posted on 05/07/2003 1:17:07 PM PDT by Mr. Mojo
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 55 | View Replies]

To: Antiwar Republican
So what is the problem? All those groups and the syrian regime are terrorists. Is it wrong to speak the truth, and right to accept lies from terrorists and left wingers? Of course, when north korea acts like a dog, they are not bad guys, we are the bad guys. This article is nothing but communist/terrorist b.s.
59 posted on 05/07/2003 1:18:11 PM PDT by gedeon3
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Antiwar Republican
Did Justine get jilted by a boyfriend? Justine ought not to take the name of a patriot and baseball champion like Yogi Berra in vain.
60 posted on 05/07/2003 1:26:13 PM PDT by BlackElk (Viva Cristo Rey! Sniveling Cowardice delenda est!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-80 ... 101-119 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson