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http://www.guardian.co.uk/uselections2004/comment/story/0,14259,1284520,00.html

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BUSH

DURING THE 1999 IOWA REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY, CANDIDATES were asked which political philosopher had influenced them the most and why. George Bush offered this response: ?Christ, because he changed my heart.? Such assertions are well-received in the churches of America, a country where 40 percent of citizens identify themselves as born-again evangelicals. Bush is one of them. In 1986, following years of heavy drinking and perfunctory church attendance, he saw the light and traded the bottle for the Bible. This newfound zeal fueled the ambition and direction that took him first to the governorship of Texas, and ultimately to the Oval Office. Convinced that he has been called by God to lead the nation, Bush asked prominent pastors to lay their hands on him and pray for the future while he campaigned for president. Now that he?s in the White House, he regularly alludes to Scripture and reads devotionals every morning.

Bush looks to the Bible for policy guidance and prefers intuition to logic. Princeton bioethicist Peter Singer equates Bush?s ethical decision-making process to that of a 13-year-old boy. His Manichean good versus evil perspective of the world does not allow for any shades of gray. It is shaped by right wing preachers who believe Satan exists and who talk about evil as a mystical force. He can afford to antagonize non-Christian voters with his religious rhetoric because the Christian right is his ultimate audience. As long as Bush stays in the good books of this massive voting bloc, his chances for re-election remain favorable.

One way to keep the Christian right happy is to consistently back Israel. Many Christians reflexively support Israel because they were raised on Sunday school stories of a mythical, allegorical nation of Israelites, God?s chosen people. They associate this Biblical narrative with the modern state of Israel and consequently overlook Palestinian aspirations for justice. The more dangerous breed of pro-Israel Christians, however, are those who identify themselves as Christian Zionists. Their narrow reading of the Bible convinces them that the second coming of Jesus is dependent on Jewish control of the Holy Lands. In the words of Jerry Falwell, ?The most dramatic evidence for His imminent return [is] the rebirth of the nation of Israel.? Right wing Israelis are happy for Christian Zionist support even though it rests on a rather anti-Semitic End Times theology: when Jesus steps onstage for his encore, Jews who don?t convert to Christianity will perish.

Bush has not publicly espoused Christian Zionist views, but it is reasonable to expect that his evangelical beliefs translate at the very least into an inflated sympathy for Israel. And even though Bush?s stated position on Israel-Palestine doesn?t jive with Christian Zionists ? they want Palestinians expelled from the region ? they are no doubt pleased with his support for Ariel Sharon. Now, they just need to convince him to fire a few missiles at Jerusalem?s Dome of the Rock. That would facilitate the reconstruction of the Temple and allow us all to sit back and relax while we watch Armageddon unfold and await Christ?s return to earth.

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WOLFOWITZ

AS A WIDE-EYED YOUNGSTER, PAUL WOLFOWITZ RECEIVED NUMEROUS lessons from his father on the dangers of totalitarianism. Jack Wolfowitz was a Polish Jew who ensured that his children understood how fortunate they were to escape the fate of relatives who lived under Stalin and Hitler. At the dinner table, Paul concluded early on that America had a moral responsibility to protect the ideals of freedom and democracy. This realization stayed with him after he left home to embark on an intellectual journey that took him to the nation?s finest universities and eventually to Washington. These days, Wolfowitz?s position as the number two man at the Pentagon gives him a special capacity to act on this conviction. And the US invasion of Iraq is largely attributed to his paradoxical insistence that the US can bring peace to the world through war.

The first time Americans went after Saddam Hussein in 1991, Wolfowitz was undersecretary of defense for policy. Iraq was successfully contained in part because of a genuine effort to build consensus among nations, but a year later, Wolfowitz and I. Lewis Libby proposed an alternate vision. Their infamous ?Defense Planning Guidance? brief called for the US to maintain its position as the world?s lone superpower by convincing ?potential competitors that they need not aspire to a greater role.? It would address the world?s trouble spots as it saw fit, and remain the dominant outside power in the Middle East in order to preserve US access to the region?s oil. The brief was toned down after it was leaked to the New York Times, but its key points are now enshrined in President Bush?s National Security Strategy, also known as the Bush Doctrine.

As one of Washington?s most prominent neocons, Wolfowitz is seen as an unflinching ideologue, blinded by his conviction that democracy can be imposed on the Middle East by force. He lacks the aversion to war held by most battle-scarred soldiers. Academic deferments kept him out of the Vietnam War, and his entire adult life has been spent in the halls of academia and the US federal bureaucracy. When Washington Post columnist David Ignatius asked Wolfowitz if he ever worried that he was too idealistic and lacked the prudence and pragmatism that normally guide war planners, Wolfowitz didn?t answer directly. He merely noted that it was a good question.

Despite the bumps along the way, Wolfowitz remains confident that the current adventure in Iraq will open the floodgates to a moderate Middle East and reduce the threat of terrorism in the long term. He also appreciates that a political solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict can help that process along. He has articulated support for a future Palestinian state and advocates ?dealing with settlements,? but he also has strong attachments to Israel. He lived there as a teenager, and his sister is married to an Israeli. During the first Gulf War, George Bush Sr. sent him to Israel to convince its leaders not to respond to Iraqi airstrikes. More recently, Bush?s son told Wolfowitz to speak on behalf of the current administration at a massive, pro-Israel rally in Washington, DC. Though Wolfowitz acknowledged Palestinian suffering ? and was showered with boos as a result ? the speech was essentially a reiteration of Israel?s position that the key hurdle to peace in the Middle East is Islamic terrorism. He concluded by proclaiming ?May God bless America, may God bless Israel, and may God bless all the peacemakers of the world.?
 

Chanman

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PERLE

RICHARD PERLE PROBABLY DOESN?T INTRODUCE HIMSELF AS ?THE PRINCE OF Darkness,? but his critics relish the nickname that he earned as a brash anti-Soviet hardliner in Ronald Reagan?s Defense Department. He is also sometimes referred to as the ?minence grise of the neoconservative movement because he exerts tremendous influence from the shadows without a formal position in the White House. And that?s the way he likes it. Donald Rumsfeld wanted to appoint him undersecretary for policy ? third in the Defense Department hierarchy ? but he passed. Instead, he chose to head the Defense Policy Board (DPB), an advisory group set up by Rumsfeld that has become a primary conduit of neocon ideology to the White House.

Alas, his DPB stint has come to an end. Last March, Perle stepped down as chairman of the board following the revelation that a company he worked for was seeking favor with the Pentagon. A year later, he quit the board altogether because he didn?t want his views attributed to George Bush in the coming presidential election. His comments suggest a concern that Americans are fed up with neocon bellicosity and will punish Bush as a result. Cynical observers figure that Perle also stepped down so that he could profit from the war in Iraq without worrying about conflict of interest issues. Perle denies any economic motives for pushing for war, but has made a lot of money as a consultant to defense contractors.

Whether Perle is on the DPB or not, few government outsiders can match his influence. He remains intimately connected to key players in the Pentagon and is affiliated with right wing think tanks such as the American Enterprise Institute, the Project for the New American Century (PNAC), the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs, and the Hudson Institute ? an outfit that promotes ousting the Saudi monarchy in favor of direct American control of their oil fields.

Perle must have been pleased when the US invaded Iraq. He long pushed for Saddam Hussein?s removal and is openly motivated in part by his concern for Israel?s safety. In 1996, Perle suggested Saddam should get the boot in an infamous report that advised Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to make a ?Clean Break? from the Oslo peace process. Six years later he again linked Saddam?s removal to Israeli safety in a PNAC letter he and other prominent neocons penned to President Bush.

Like his good friend Paul Wolfowitz, Perle?s perspective on international relations is shaped in large part by the Jewish experience during World War II. He told the BBC that the Holocaust was ?the defining moment in our history . . . and it was the failure to respond in a timely fashion to a threat that was clearly gathering. We don?t want that to happen again. When we have the ability to stop totalitarian regimes we should do so, because when we fail to do so, the results are catastrophic.?

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GENERAL TOMMY FRANKS ONCE REFERRED TO UNDERSECRETARY OF DEFENSE FOR policy Douglas Feith as ?the ****ing stupidest guy on the face of the Earth.? Colin Powell is no fan either. Bob Woodward quoted him bemoaning the ?Gestapo office? Feith established to collect intelligence data because he didn?t trust the CIA.

George Bush initially offered Feith?s job to Richard Perle, but when he passed, the president went for the next best thing. Feith is a loyal disciple of Perle and takes a similar hard line. On the Israeli-Palestinian question, he was a vociferous opponent of the Oslo peace process and helped Perle author the ?Clean Break? document.

Now that he is in government, Feith must present a more balanced perspective, but as a lawyer affiliated with the ultra-hawkish Center for Security Policy, he consistently argued that blame for the conflict lies squarely in the Arab camp. He rejected ?land for peace? deals with Palestinians, asserted that all of Jerusalem must remain in Jewish hands and affirmed Israel?s right to colonize the West Bank ? or Judea-Samaria as he and other Zionists like to call it.

Feith?s perspective substantiates the adage ?the apple doesn?t fall far from the tree.? His father, Dalck Feith, was a member of the 1930s Polish Zionist movement Betar ? a forerunner of Israel?s Likud Party ? and later joined the Zionist underground. Both father and son were given awards in 1997 by the Zionist Organization of America (ZOA), one of the most right wing, pro-Israel groups in the US.

Lately, Feith has become a bit of a punching bag following revelations that his ?Gestapo office? provided shoddy intelligence in the buildup to the Iraq war. Despite the CIA?s inability to find any evidence linking Saddam Hussein with al Qaeda, Feith?s counterterrorism office was convinced the link was there. He and his subordinates were fixated on toppling Saddam, and so they blindly listened to informants who told them what they wanted to hear. Nevertheless, Feith stands by their findings. Neocons, after all, don?t apologize, because in their eyes, they?re never wrong. They can?t be.

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RICE

IN THE DAYS FOLLOWING THE SEPTEMBER 11TH ATTACKS, GEORGE BUSH?S
closest advisors converged on Camp David to chart a course for America?s response. One evening, after a day of war talk, Condoleeza Rice comforted the group by singing hymns and traditional American songs for over an hour. Rice likes the fact that she can sing Christian songs with her colleagues: ?In many ways, it?s a wonderful White House to be in because there are a lot of people who are of faith, starting with the president.?

She is careful to say ?faith? where she means ?Christianity,? but she happily wears her religion on her sleeve. George Bush?s National Security Advisor is the daughter of a Presbyterian minister who grew up in segregated Birmingham in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Church for her was not only a place to worship, it was also the social center of the community and the focal point of her life. As a young girl, she was already groomed for success. Her early years consisted of ballet and language and piano lessons. In 1963, when Rice was eight, she visited the White House with her father and declared, ?One day, I?ll be in that house.? This at a time when blacks had a hard enough time even voting. She skipped two grades in school and enrolled in university at 15, eventually completing a PhD in international studies. She began teaching at Stanford University in 1981, before joining George H. W. Bush?s National Security Council in 1989. The arrival of Bill Clinton saw her return to Stanford. During this time she also sat on the board of Chevron, and the company said thank you by naming an oil tanker after her. When Bush?s son took the presidential reins, Rice got the call to run the National Security Council and returned to Washington.

Although she is a close confidant to the president, she does not enjoy the influence that national security advisors have traditionally enjoyed. Many liken her to a courtier who provides Bush with emotional support while the neocons in the Defense Department determine his foreign policy. For, although Rice and Bush are on different intellectual planes, they share a profound bond thanks to their love of football and fervent Christianity. Rice prays with the president regularly and takes great comfort in the knowledge that millions of Americans petition God on her boss?s behalf every day. Their shared sense of Christian morality shapes their view of the world and puts them on the same page policy-wise.

Right wing Christians tend to see America and Israel as spiritually connected and beacons of God?s light in a wicked, pagan world. Rice may not agree with the more radical ideas of Christian Zionists, but she is open about her ?deep bond? to Israel. She told the country?s Yediot Aharonot newspaper: ?I first visited Israel in 2000. I already then felt that I am returning home despite the fact that this was a place I never visited. I have a deep affinity with Israel. I have always admired the history of the State of Israel and the hardness and determination of the people that founded it.?
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Sourced from Adbusters #54.
 

SALTY DOG

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Aug 3, 2003
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19th hole
It is also an indication of who the party is that
see's the glass half full...as opposed to the
other party that see's the glass empty... I've
always found in life the positive thinkers lead
the more productive, fullfilling, HAPPY life, it's
all in your attitude...you hate waking up in the
morning like djv and fast eddie....or you can
pull up your pants and tie your boots and go
out and try to make the world better and have
a damn good time doing it.... :toast:
 
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