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Martin Eden Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Feb-20-04 06:19 PM
Original message
Karen Kwiatkowski interview with Marc Cooper
Edited on Fri Feb-20-04 06:20 PM by Martin Eden
Karen Kwiatkowski is a lifelong conservative and had a 20 year career in the military, but when she came into contact with the neoconservatives in the Pentagon's Office of Special Plans, she felt it was her duty to resign her commission and soldier on for the truth. Here is a brief excerpt from an interview that is well worth the read:

What do you believe the real reasons were for the war?

The neoconservatives needed to do more than just topple Saddam Hussein. They wanted to put in a government friendly to the U.S., and they wanted permanent basing in Iraq. There are several reasons why they wanted to do that. None of those reasons, of course, were presented to the American people or to Congress.

So you don’t think there was a genuine interest as to whether or not there really were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq?

It’s not about interest. We knew. We knew from many years of both high-level surveillance and other types of shared intelligence, not to mention the information from the U.N., we knew, we knew what was left and the viability of any of that. Bush said he didn’t know.

The truth is, we know didn’t have these things. Almost a billion dollars has been spent — a billion dollars! — by David Kay’s group to search for these WMD, a total whitewash effort. They didn’t find anything, they didn’t expect to find anything.

So if, as you argue, they knew there weren’t any of these WMD, then what exactly drove the neoconservatives to war?

The neoconservatives pride themselves on having a global vision, a long-term strategic perspective. And there were three reasons why they felt the U.S. needed to topple Saddam, put in a friendly government and occupy Iraq.

One of those reasons is that sanctions and containment were working and everybody pretty much knew it. Many companies around the world were preparing to do business with Iraq in anticipation of a lifting of sanctions. But the U.S. and the U.K. had been bombing northern and southern Iraq since 1991. So it was very unlikely that we would be in any kind of position to gain significant contracts in any post-sanctions Iraq. And those sanctions were going to be lifted soon, Saddam would still be in place, and we would get no financial benefit.

The second reason has to do with our military-basing posture in the region. We had been very dissatisfied with our relations with Saudi Arabia, particularly the restrictions on our basing. And also there was dissatisfaction from the people of Saudi Arabia. So we were looking for alternate strategic locations beyond Kuwait, beyond Qatar, to secure something we had been searching for since the days of Carter — to secure the energy lines of communication in the region. Bases in Iraq, then, were very important — that is, if you hold that is America’s role in the world. Saddam Hussein was not about to invite us in.

The last reason is the conversion, the switch Saddam Hussein made in the Food for Oil program, from the dollar to the euro. He did this, by the way, long before 9/11, in November 2000 — selling his oil for euros. The oil sales permitted in that program aren’t very much. But when the sanctions would be lifted, the sales from the country with the second largest oil reserves on the planet would have been moving to the euro.

The U.S. dollar is in a sensitive period because we are a debtor nation now. Our currency is still popular, but it’s not backed up like it used to be. If oil, a very solid commodity, is traded on the euro, that could cause massive, almost glacial, shifts in confidence in trading on the dollar. So one of the first executive orders that Bush signed in May <2003> switched trading on Iraq’s oil back to the dollar.

Read the entire interview:
http://www.commondreams.org/views04/0220-03.htm
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KC21304 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Feb-20-04 07:12 PM
Response to Original message
1. This is dynamite. I'm wondering if it is a coincidence
that the report on Libya's nuke program was released today. It does seem to discredit what she says on Libya.
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boobooday Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Feb-20-04 07:19 PM
Response to Original message
2. Very interesting
I have been hoping that someone from this administration would come out with the truth. And then not suddenly retract it. I have read about her before.

The media seems suddenly more willing to criticize Bush. Perhaps she will attract some attention, and not suddenly change her mind!

http://www.wgoeshome.com

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kalian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Feb-20-04 07:44 PM
Response to Original message
3. Kick!
Edited on Fri Feb-20-04 07:45 PM by kalian
This needs to get out more.
She's extremely brave for making these statements. I really hope that
she doesn't have "an accident"...
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