Neo-conservative power comes crashing down in washington DC

Phokus

Lifer
Nov 20, 1999
22,994
779
126
Neo-Con Collapse in Washington and Baghdad
Analysis - By Jim Lobe

WASHINGTON, Jun 1 (IPS) - Fourteen months after reaching the zenith of their influence on U.S. foreign policy with the invasion of Iraq, neo-conservatives appear to have fallen entirely out of favour, both within the administration of President George W Bush and in Baghdad itself.

The signs of their defeat at the hands of both reality and the so-called ''realists'', who are headed within the administration by Secretary of State Colin Powell, are virtually everywhere but were probably best marked by the cover of 'Newsweek' magazine last week, which depicted the framed photograph of the neo-cons' favourite Iraqi, Ahmad Chalabi, which had been shattered during a joint police-U.S. military raid on his headquarters in Baghdad. 'Bush's Mr. Wrong' was the title of the feature article.

The victory of the realists, who also include the uniformed military and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), appeared complete Monday with the unveiling of the interim Iraqi government to which an as-yet undefined sovereignty is to be transferred from the U.S.-led occupation authorities Jun. 30.

Not only was Chalabi's arch-rival-in-exile, Iyad Allawi, approved by the Iraqi Governing Council (IGC) as prime minister, but neither Chalabi nor any of his closest IGC associates, especially Finance Minister Kamel al-Gailani -- who is accused of handing over much of Iraq's banking system to Chalabi during his tenure -- made it into the final line-up.

''It looks like Chalabi is the big loser'', said one congressional aide who follows Iraq closely. ''And neo-con has become a dirty word up here'', he added, referring to the Congress, where Republicans have become increasingly restive as a result of recent debacles in Iraq, including the scandal over the abuse by U.S. soldiers of Iraqi detainees and leaks that Chalabi had been passing sensitive intelligence to Iran, and may have done so for years.

''We need to restrain what are growing U.S. messianic instincts -- a sort of global social engineering where the United States feels it is both entitled and obligated to promote democracy -- by force if necessary'', said Senator Pat Roberts, a conservative Kansas member of Bush's Republican Party and chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, in a speech last week that was understood here as a direct shot at the neo-cons.

The neo-conservatives, a key part of the coalition of hawks that dominated Bush's post-9/11 foreign policy, were the first to publicly call for Saddam Hussein's ouster, which they saw as a way to transform the Arab world to make it more hospitable to western values, U.S. interests and Israel's territorial ambitions.

Since the latter part of the 1990s, when they led the charge in Congress for the 1998 Iraq Liberation Act (ILA), Chalabi and his Iraqi National Congress (INC) was their chosen instrument to achieve that transformation.

While no neo-cons were appointed to cabinet-level positions under Bush, they obtained top posts in the offices of Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld -- where Paul Wolfowitz was named deputy defence secretary and Douglas Feith under secretary for policy -- and Vice President Dick Cheney, whose chief of staff and national security adviser was I Lewis ''Scooter'' Libby.

On the White House National Security Council staff, they were able to place former Iran-contra figure Elliott Abrams and Robert Joseph in key positions dealing with the Middle East and arms proliferation, respectively.

Rumsfeld's Defence Policy Board (DPB) was dominated by neo-cons, notably its former chairman, Richard Perle, former CIA chief James Woolsey, former arms-control negotiator Kenneth Adelman and military historian Eliot Cohen.

Neo-cons, more than any other group, pushed hardest for war in Iraq after 9/11 and predicted, backed up by Chalabi's assurances, that the conflict would be, among other things, a ''cakewalk'' and that U.S. troops would be greeted with ''flowers and sweets''.

Within the administration, the neo-cons, again relying heavily on Chalabi's INC, developed their own intelligence analyses to bolster the notion of a link between former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and the al-Qaeda terrorist group, and exaggerated Hussein's alleged weapons of mass destruction (WMD) to provide a more credible pretext for war.

Their friends on the DPB and in the media then stoked the public's fears about these threats through frequent appearances on television and a barrage of newspaper columns and magazine articles.

While analysts and regional experts at the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the State Department, which had dropped Chalabi as a fraud and a con-man in the mid-1990s, tried to resist the juggernaut, they were consistently outflanked by the neo-cons, whose influence and ability to circumvent the professionals was greatly enhanced by their access to Rumsfeld and Cheney, who served as their champions in the White House and with Bush personally.

Their influence reached its zenith in early April when Chalabi and 700 of his paid INC troops were airlifted by the Pentagon to the southern city of Nasariyeh on Cheney's authority against Bush's stated policy that Washington would not favour one Iraqi faction over another. Bush's own national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, professed surprise when informed of the move by reporters.

While they were still riding high as U.S. troops consolidated their control of Iraq, the neo-cons' star began to wane already last August when it became clear that their and Chalabi's predictions about a grateful Iraqi populace were about as well-founded as their certainties about Hussein's ties to al-Qaeda and his WMD stockpiles.

Sensing trouble ahead, Rice asked former ambassador to India, Robert Blackwill, to return to the White House, where he had been her boss during the presidency of George HW Bush, the current leader's father (1989-93). By October, she and he had formed an inter-agency Iraq Stabilisation Group (ISG) that gradually wrested control of Iraq policy from the Pentagon.

It was a process in which Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) chief Paul Bremer, who had come to detest Chalabi and his neo-con backers in Baghdad and Washington, was an enthusiastic participant and which was effectively completed with the announcement late last month that the State Department was taking over the 14 billion dollars in reconstruction money for Iraq that the Pentagon has not yet spent.

In the last month, the neo-con retreat has turned into a rout, particularly as reports of Chalabi's cosiness with Iran gained currency and, just as important, senior military officers indicated that a military victory over the Iraqi insurgency was not possible.

The public attention given to a blistering attack on the neo-cons by the former chief of the U.S. Central Command, Gen Anthony Zinni, on the popular television programme, '60 Minutes', also demonstrated that the media, ever cautious about taking on powerful figures, now saw them as fair game.

When Perle, Woolsey and several other neo-cons visited Rice at the White House on May 1 to protest the shoddy treatment Chalabi was receiving at the hands of the CIA, Bremer and the State Department, participants said she thanked them for their views and offered nothing more. Neither Rumsfeld nor Cheney nor any of their neo-con aides attended.

http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/interna.asp?idnews=23986
 

Painman

Diamond Member
Feb 27, 2000
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If America wants to perform "social experiments" it should do so at home, not abroad.
 

Ldir

Platinum Member
Jul 23, 2003
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They had an interview with Perle on the news yesterday. He is still defending Chalabi.
 

chess9

Elite member
Apr 15, 2000
7,748
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How do we know Chalabi isn't anything more than the convenient fall guy for a failed policy in Iraq? Bush is backing out of Iraq as quickly as he can. The new provisional government is not one Bush would have picked but they are keeping mum and trying to drum up support for an international coalition post 6/30. Obviously the neocons ARE in full retreat and Rove in particular knows that a deft disengagement of the U.S. from Iraq will save Bush's election-probably.

When the neocons were in full flower, Chalabi was the darling of the Bush administration. They didn't care that the didn't have any support among Iraqis, and, in fact, that was considered an asset. But, now that Iraq is one huge bloody mess and Bush wants out Chalabi is an inconvenient stumbling block to their quick exit, principally because he never picked up popular support. Wow....

Bush has spun on a dime and few seem to have noticed, or care.

-Robert
 
May 10, 2001
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Neo-con is a hate group;

I don't know wtheck neo-con means otherwise...

The only wacky-named people I know on the right are the Vulcan's.

someone please link me to a website for this group called 'neo-con's, they should have a recruitment web-page, right?
 

conjur

No Lifer
Jun 7, 2001
58,686
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Originally posted by: LordMagnusKain
Neo-con is a hate group;

I don't know wtheck neo-con means otherwise...

The only wacky-named people I know on the right are the Vulcan's.

someone please link me to a website for this group called 'neo-con's, they should have a recruitment web-page, right?

The key ones influencing this administration:

http://www.newamericancentury.org
 
May 10, 2001
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Of course, the conceit of the piece is that there is a cohesive "neoconservative" movement. And precisely because that is not the case, journalists, pundits and policy analysts have felt free to label virtually everyone and anyone they (typically disagree with) as being neoconservatives.
Just what i thought.
 

Bowmaster

Senior member
Mar 11, 2002
523
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The signs of their defeat at the hands of both reality and the so-called ''realists'', who are headed within the administration by Secretary of State Colin Powell

Wrong. The Bush administration considers all people who don't totally agree with them "the enemy". Their way of thinking is Black/White. They will never change their way of thinking - even when they are out of office, they will still think they were totally correct.
 

conjur

No Lifer
Jun 7, 2001
58,686
3
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Originally posted by: LordMagnusKain
Of course, the conceit of the piece is that there is a cohesive "neoconservative" movement. And precisely because that is not the case, journalists, pundits and policy analysts have felt free to label virtually everyone and anyone they (typically disagree with) as being neoconservatives.
Just what i thought.

Yeah...like they're an honest broker to defend themselves?
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
74,459
6,689
126
Originally posted by: LordMagnusKain
Of course, the conceit of the piece is that there is a cohesive "neoconservative" movement. And precisely because that is not the case, journalists, pundits and policy analysts have felt free to label virtually everyone and anyone they (typically disagree with) as being neoconservatives.
Just what i thought.

More incoherent mutterings from the neointellectual mutterer?