The 9/11 Conspiracy Facts

Right, and what is the counter incentive? Relief from the sanction that have been crippling their country. The "carpet of gold" the US had been promising possibly. Think about this.

Think about this. "Incentives" don't do you a lick of good when you are no longer in power because your best fighting unit is either sitting out the fight with the Northern Alliance or fighting with them.

Regarding Clarke's memo, it came out in Dec 2000, and would have been written before then. The concrete straetgies for killing OBL, e.g. the house in Daronta, came out around this same time. Thus it can be no way other than Clarke not mentioning it.

So Richard Clarke never got around to mentioning it in his memo to Condoleezza Rice? Never got around to mentioning it to anybody? Maybe he's still catching up with his paperwork? Maybe that's why it's not even in his book?

Such an offer didnt exist, yes,

EXACTLY
 
1 - Who are "the most reputable journalists in the US", and how is this determined?

2 - Who are the specific journalists you're referring to who "confirmed" this?

2.1 - And links to where they confirmed same.

3 - Why haven't we seen this documentation to back up his claims?

I hope mjd1982 is not referring to Cockburn and St. Clair. As of 2004, when the story ran, the total paid circulation of Counterpunch was 5,000. (Compared with the India Globe's 10,000. And, say, the Washington Post's 700,000.) Of course, because they are saying something he likes to hear, I would imagine that makes them "the most reputable journalists in the US". :rolleyes:

What's that word? Propitious?
 
His claims are supported by documentation which, though we do have not seen, is confirmed by 2 of the most reputable journalists in the US.

These guy's?

Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair are both veteran journalists and authors doing the kind of muckraking political and other investigative writing only found in the US online and in out-of-the-mainstream publications and political newsletters like the one they co-publish and edit - CounterPunch with its counterpart web site of the same name.

In addition, he's a contributing editor of In These Times magazine and has written for The Nation, The Progressive, New Left Review and other publications.


http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=21&ItemID=12838

CounterPunch is a biweekly newsletter published in the United States that covers politics from a left-wing perspective. It includes a website, updated daily, which contains much more material not published in the newsletter.

Running six to eight pages in length, the CounterPunch newsletter primarily publishes commentaries by Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair with regular contributions by others. It is noted for its critical coverage of both Democratic and Republican politicians and its extensive reporting of environmental and trade union issues, American foreign policy, and the Israeli-Arab conflict. CounterPunch considers itself to carry on the tradition of muckraking journalism of earlier investigative journalists such as I.F. Stone and George Seldes, casting its approach as "muckraking with a radical attitude."

Alexander Claud Cockburn (pronounced [ˈkəʊbɜːn], "co-burn"), born June 6, 1941, is a self-described radical Irish journalist who has lived and worked in the United States since 1973. Together with Jeffrey St. Clair he edits the political newsletter CounterPunch. He also writes the "Beat the Devil" column for The Nation and a weekly syndicated column for the Los Angeles Times. Cockburn was also a regular contributor to the Anderson Valley Advertiser.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Cockburn


Not exactly highly respected.
 
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Mark-

The PNAC section of your LC guide is lying in tatters on p3 of the Conspiracy Facts thread. You have been exhorted many many times to address it sensibly, if, that is, you do indeed take your own comments seriously. As can be seen on the thread, you have been unable to do so. Given that you are such an intrepid seeker of the truth, will you tell us why this is? If you have indeed extricated yourself from the mire of your own stupid conclusions, it might be best to not let your colleagues here continue wallowing in it.

I will wait.
Hi

Some of your rubbish was shredded in this post.

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=2682478&postcount=89

As for your analysis of PNAC, I find some of your embedded assumptions to be smothered in post hoc rationalization. I read the PNAC piece in early 2001. In 2003, I read Kagan's "On Paradise and Power" and was struck by how he correctly pointed to the loss of political will in NATO. PNAC's capstone document was written in 1998, and as I read it, was aimed at President Clinton, and a direct criticism of his foreign policy, particularly Clinton's having played away a winning hand he had been dealt in the form of the US Military he inherited upon his innauguration.
mjd 1982 said:
Now, since some have pointed out that this has been "debunked ad nauseam", I'm going to take the PNAC section of Gravy's Loose Change Guide, and go through it. I am aware that you have discussed it at points, but with little clarity, it would seem. So.
Gravy said:
I have yet to come across a 9/11 conspiracy theorist who DID NOT use this quote as "evidence" that the terrorist attacks were an "inside job" by the neo-cons in the U.S. government. However, the PNAC quote is about the typically slow growth of military technology, abetted by budget cuts in defense R&D.
Problems already. Firstly, the quote is not about slow growth in technology. The transformation addressed is quite clear to ascertain- that of technology and operational concepts. This is evident from:
PNAC snippet 1 said:
The United States cannot simply declare a “strategic pause” while experimenting with new
technologies and operational concepts and an instance of potential transformation cited.
PNAC snippet 2 said:
A transformation strategy that solely pursued capabilities for projecting force from the United States, for example, and sacrificed forward basing and presence, would be at odds with larger American policy goals and would trouble American allies.
A clear example of a transformational strategy that is not merely technological in nature. Thus, the term "transformation" refers not only to technologies, but also to operational concepts- global posture, transformation of the DoD, using cyberspace as a defense tool- which have been the subject of much of the document.
At core, you miss a key strategic point. After The Wall came down, a significant political movement in the US arose to "stop being the world's policeman" and "accrue the peace dividend." This brought the US Army down from 17 divisions to 12, for example, cut the US Navy down to 300+ from 500+ combatants, reduced the number of ACC Wings to 20, etc. What the PNAC guys were ragging on about was that the base force, Powells's Bottom's Up Review product, had been discarded, and that the old "Two Major Regional Contingency" force posturing (One in Korea, on in the Mid East) had been eroded to "Win one, hold one" with the allies in the "hold" strategy rather nervous about how long hold would have to go on since they relied on big brother US to help them win. Hold is not a winning strategy, it is a delaying strategy. The CONUS based, globally projected strategy much talked about in the Aspin, Perry, Cohen Sec Def days had a small problem: the strat lift to accomplish it wasn't on hand. LMSR, LPD 17, and C-17 were all in trouble in the mid 1990's, and underfunded, as was Comanche for about a decade before it got cut. It is worth noting that General Shinseki, when he took over as Chief of Staff under Clinton, was a man bound and determined to break the US Army from its love affair with the tank in favor of a lighter armored vehicle, partly to make the US Army more deployable From A CONUS Base.

The Clinton cuts beyond the base force, to 10 divisions from 12, to 12 CVBG's with <300 ships, and other reductions in force were seen as a signal to Korea that we weren't sincere about defending them IAW current Op Plans that were, as of that writing, agreed. Taking the PNAC analysis as viewed through a paper towel tube is an intellecutally dishonest method of analyzing the paper.
Gravy said:
It is in no way a plan or suggestion for a "new Pearl Harbor."
It states that for such a transformation, crucial, to occur within a timeframe shorter than decades, a new Pearl Harbour would need to happen. Given that for such to happen within years/months, rather than decades is propitious, especially bearing in mind the aims of the "Projects for the new american century", then we can equally conclude that they deem a new PH propitious to policy.
No, we cannot. We can conclude nothing of the sort. IT shows rather a profound understanding of US military civilian patterns, and the grow/shrink cycles that have gone on since the days of the Revolution, in terms of the military establishment, as well as the powerful Jacksonian strain of American populism who don't want to mess in foreign affairs without powerful reasons. The statemens as written is a clear headed analysis of the political trends in the US. This has been interpreted POST HOC, over and over, as a mission statement pointed to creating a Second Perl Harbor. It requires an agenda to make that interpretation. To say that PNAC's architects leaped at the opportunity that 9-11 created is very true, but that does not prove, other than via the post hoc, ergo prompter hoc fallacy, that PNAC created all of the conditions, through action, that led to the events of that day. LIHOP? Maybe. LIHDTI (Due To Indifference) Perhaps.
gravy said:
Is it plausible that these "conspirators" would publicly announce a plan to kill thousands of Americans?
This is pretty silly. The idea that "they wouldnt say it, so they didnt say it". is pretty worthless in discussion- it is there in black and white. If you can discredit its purported import, then go ahead. To state that it ipso facto could not happen, is pretty myopic in my opinion.
While Mark's point is not iron clad, it takes a real leap to infer that in 1998, Donald Rumsfeld was not interested in the US strategic interest, but in killing Americans for his own ends. Again, this is you reading something into the paper.
Gravy said:
According to CT logic, these "conspirators" are the smartest, most devious, most capable connivers the world has ever seen - but are incredbly stupid. This PNAC quote issue is a lot like the CTist emphasis on Larry Silverstein's "Pull it" quote. Right: whenever I commit a billion-dollar crime, I always tell the media I did it.
Wrong. These conspirators are the dumbest, most bungling bunch that could ever be imagined. 9/11 is pretty much as evident an inside job as can be reasonably expected. The calling card of the Bush admin is all over it. The PNAC doc is a prime example of such stupidity. People's dismissal of it is a prime example of why such stupidity can persist.
Wrong. The PNAC document is a prime example of a political position paper, written to advance a point and to embarass a sitting president, Clinton. Your characterization of it as a bungle, and your characterization of its authors as stupid is a simple ad hom, post hoc relative to 9-11, that has no basis, nor support. That doesn't make PNAC's position, nor its strategy right. It does make your assertion unsupported.
Gravy said:
What is the main thrust of the PNAC plan for military transformation? A nationwide missile defense shield, and dominance of outer-space for offensive and defensive purposes. That's right: "Star Wars."
I'm sorry, but this is only true with pretty slack reading of the document. The main thrust if their plan is outlines clearly in the "Key Finding" section at the start. I do not take too much stock in the total execution of these strategies, since they are reflective of execution rather than design, but I do want to go through them, since they do reflect quite accurately, the current "War on Terror"
PNAC snipet said:
ESTABLISH FOUR CORE MISSIONS for U.S. military forces:
• defend the American homeland;
• fight and decisively win multiple, simultaneous major theater wars;
This is a direct slam on the Clinton era retreat from "handle two MRC's and go to a "win hold win" strategy, since it was cheaper. (MRC = Major Regional Contingency: see Korea and Persian Gulf for one each, with Southeastern Turkey and Europe as less likely, but still big, MRC's.)
• perform the “constabulary” duties associated with shaping the security environment in
critical regions;
• transform U.S. forces to exploit the “revolution in military affairs;”
The RMA was all about the Silver Bullet idiots trying to wish away the human element in war, and to kill off the tank as an American prime weapons system, while the Critical Regions was a reference to idiot missions like Somalia and FWIW, Bosnia, as nation building exercises. The constabulary duties are explicitly NOT peacekeeping duties. I was inside the belly of the beast when that issue was being kicked around in the mid 1990's.
To carry out these core missions, we need to provide sufficient force and budgetary
allocations.
A direct slam on Clinton's consistent budget cuts, which was creating a cracked to hollow force, due to how it mangled the manpower angle, and kept driving up unit costs in critical programs like C-17, LPD-17, and Comanche by cutting the production runs.
So, let's look at these budgetary allocations. From 2001 to 2003, the defense budget increased by 33%- an unprecedented amount. This increase was pursued almost exclusively under the aegis of the War on Terror, which of course, is pursued under the aegis of the new PH.
1. Try the 1982-1984 Reagan era defense budget increases. Also, during 2001-2003, 9-11 happened and a whole bunch of unprogrammed increases showed up in support of the Afghanistan Operation. You presume that the intention was that from all along, but I will counter with the insider dope that in early 2000, and based on directives from the CNO as recently as 2004, the Rummy Plan before 9-11 was To Cut The Force Yet Again and focus on toys. 9-11 interrupted the RMA.

Read that again.

New toys bought, yes, manpower accounts reduced, YES. 8 CVBG's, down from 12, Crusader gone, and all that RMA bullspit that I won't go into here. Here we were, in a shooting war, up tempo CVBG deployments, and the CNO is being told to cut from 12 to 8 CVBG's. Pilot manpower was being cut, during a shooting war. Unprecedented, eh? I'll add "stupid," while I am at it.
In particular, the United States must: MAINTAIN NUCLEAR STRATEGIC SUPERIORITY, basing the U.S. nuclear deterrent upon a global, nuclear net assessment that weighs the full range of current and emerging threats, not merely the U.S.-Russia balance.
1982 said:
This was again, pursued via the 2001 Nuclear Posture Review, which states explicity the need for pursuing this in the new uncertain, post 9/11 world in which we live. Indeed:
Duh, recycled post-Cold-War-Multi-Polar-World-Rhetoric.
:
The second leg of the New Triad requires development and deployment of both active and passive defenses--a recognition that offensive capabilities alone may not deter aggression in the new security environment of the 21st century.
This was obvious before Bush took office, and was an extension of the BMDO's efforts throughout the 1990's to counter the theater, tactical and strategic Ballistic Missile threat thanks to Scud's in 1991 exposing a chink in our armor. I worked some BMD projects in NATO, mid 1990's, and can tell you that this passage is consistent with recognizing that the MAD policy and the two party MAD policies were completely untenable in a multi polar world. Even Clinton saw this.

The events of September 11, 2001 underscore this reality.
Not sure what you mean by that.
RESTORE THE PERSONNEL STRENGTH of today’s force to roughly the levels anticipated in
the “Base Force” outlined by the Bush Administration, an increase in active-duty strength
from 1.4 million to 1.6 million.
Given the American government's choice during Clinton's years not to withdraw from global events, but to stay "forward engaged" the PNAC guys recognized what those of us in the military saw the OPTEMPO doing to people: if you want to be deploying a lot, you have to pay for it. That means man to those levels.

This is not rocket science.
This number is increasing, from 1.41million to 1.43. This is a small change, but to add even 10,000 troops costs $1.2 bn, according to Richard Myers (would love to be posting URLs here btw)
Yeah. Of course, since Rummy took over, they were doing manpower cuts during a war, 2003-2004, in the Navy among other places.
REPOSITION U.S. FORCES to respond to 21st century strategic realities by shifting
permanently-based forces to Southeast Europe and Southeast Asia, and by changing naval
deployment patterns to reflect growing U.S. strategic concerns in East Asia.
Again done via the 2002 Global Posture Review
This is rational, given that the pile of troops in Europe were hardly needed. Bring them home, or keep them over seas closer to where they might fight. The latter was chosen, due to how long it takes to deploy from CONUS if you don't fund a massive increase in strateic lift, which neither Bush nor Clinton has done.
MODERNIZE CURRENT U.S. FORCES SELECTIVELY, proceeding with the F-22 program while
increasing purchases of lift, electronic support and other aircraft; expanding submarine
and surface combatant fleets; purchasing Comanche helicopters and medium-weight
ground vehicles for the Army, and the V-22 Osprey “tilt-rotor” aircraft for the Marine
Corps.
The Surface fleet has SHRUNK to below 300 ships since PNAC was written. The sub fleet has SHRUNK since 1998. Comanche is dead. Stryker is made, and V-22 survived. F-22 is alive and well, FWIW.
All done, I believe, save the Comanches
Nope.
CANCEL “ROADBLOCK” PROGRAMS such as the Joint Strike Fighter, CVX aircraft carrier,
and Crusader howitzer system that would absorb exorbitant amounts of Pentagon funding
while providing limited improvements to current capabilities. Savings from these canceled
programs should be used to spur the process of military transformation.
Not sure about the JSF, but done for the Crusader.
Crusader is dead, JSF is ALIVE AND WELL, and CVX, or at least CV follow on to the Nimitz class, is still around. DDX is running into trouble, again. :p
Quote:
DEVELOP AND DEPLOY GLOBAL MISSILE DEFENSES to defend the American homeland and
American allies, and to provide a secure basis for U.S. power projection around the world.
This was relaunched in 2002, and the Star Wars type systems are indeed being pursued, with the UK mooted as a possible base.
This program has been in place since mid 1990's, all Bush did was add funding, and keep it from dying as Comanche did.
CONTROL THE NEW “INTERNATIONAL COMMONS” OF SPACE AND “CYBERSPACE,” and pave
the way for the creation of a new military service – U.S. Space Forces – with the mission of
space control.
This has been done- check the “National Space Policy”, and the “National Strategy for Securing Cyberspace”.
These policies were not new, friend, and if you bother to check the professional literature of the mid and late 1990's, you will find that a lot of profound thought went into Network Warfare, Cyberwarfare, and Space Policy under Clinton's watch. I couldn't escape the never ending stream of rhetoric on the topic. I even got to brief a flag officer on how vulnerable his HQ was to an EMP weapon delivered by a large motor boat.
Note that these sorts of policies would have been very hard to justify without the WOT as theor pretext.
Where do you derive this from conclusion from? The RMA predates Bush arriving in DC, and all of this stuff was in work during the mid 1990's. You demonstrate that you don't know what you are talking about. You can't justify BMD with GWOT, you justify it due to Korea, Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, China, ETC, all having ICBM's, and none of them being in the ABM treaty.
EXPLOIT THE “REVOLUTION IN MILITARY AFFAIRS” to insure the long-term superiority of
U.S. conventional forces. Establish a two-stage transformation process which maximizes the value of current weapons systems through the application of advanced technologies, and,
produces more profound improvements in military capabilities, encourages competition
between single services and joint-service experimentation efforts.
I think this has been dealt with above
Except that you don't seem to know what it means, nor its context. The RMA was the most over used soundbyte in DC that mean't "do more with less and rely on silver bullets and tech to solve your problems, we are shrinking the force." This crap was alive and well in the late 1990's, within the Clinton Defense Department. All Rummy did was make it more intense, and spend more on some of it, and then fight a war on the cheap while he was trying to cut the manpower bill.
INCREASE DEFENSE SPENDING gradually to a minimum level of 3.5 to 3.8 percent of gross
domestic product, adding $15 billion to $20 billion to total defense spending annually.
A reaction to the over reductions of Clinton which came along side a threefold increase in deployments, Optempo, among reserves and the Operating Forces between 1993 and 1999.
Done, as intimated above, to the tune of ~$130bn from 01-03.
Partly in response to a war.
Gravy said:
That type of technology would not have stopped the attacks of 9/11. So what about those low-tech terrorists that we're at war with now? "Rebuilding America's Defenses"
Sorry, who are we at war with again?
Afghan and Iraqi Anti Coalition Forces, and whoever else BushCo can tag as "a terrorist."
In case you hadn’t realized, the War on Terror is not in fact a war on terror. Not even the Bush admin would be so stupid as to try and vanquish an abstract noun. Nor is it a War on Terrorism. A quick look at the massive terrorists being granted asylum by the US- Luis Posada Carriles, Orlando Bosch, Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada, Carlos Sanchez Berzain to name a few- debunks this idea. I don’t think that such a notion is intended to be taken seriously by serious people.
Don't find much to disagree with there.
The WOT is, as illustrated above, what was once called the “Rebuilding (of) America’s Defenses”, i.e. a serious of radical military measures aimed at furthering US hegemony.
No, the WOT is a response to 9-11, and thirty years of failed policy vis a vis terrorists. Rebuilding America's defenses was a peacetime strategy to recapitalize parts of the US Defense capability along Silver Bullet Lines. I spent enough time on flag officer staffs, and dealing with the effects of Silver Bullet thinking from 1995-2005 to see what was really going on, thanks, from the inside. :p
Now, if you wanted to increase defense spending in the areas that the PNAC recommends, what is the LAST thing you'd want to do? Answer: get involved in a ground war and subsequent occupation of a country where many citizens are fighting a guerilla-style campaign against you and against each other with AK-47s, RPGs, and IEDs made from cell phones and 10,000 tons of old artillery shells.As I am writing this, on May 6, 2006, the news has come on: 3 car bombs have gone off in Baghdad and one in Karbala, killing at least 30 Iraqis, including 10 soldiers, and several Italian and Romanian troops. In Basra, a British helicopter was shot down, killing its five crew members, and rescuers were bombarded with fire bombs and rocks. They opened fire on the rioting crowd, killing 4 Iraqis, including a child, and wounding 30. Yesterday, Porter Goss, the incompetent CIA chief, was forced to resign.
The fact that such spending and policies are indeed being justified by 9/11 simply makes the case all the more stark that 9/11 is being used as a pretext for military radicalisation, as outlined in RAD, no matter how incongruously. Such spending and programs have been launched, with the WOT as its aegis.
A response to a change in METT-T, on a strategic level, and certainly the taking of an opportunity to use emotional leverage from reaction to 9-11. THAT DOES NOT MAKE 9-11 an Inside Job, it makes it An Excuse.
The fact that these programs aren’t not being pursued, with more anti-terror policies in their stead- border control, more police, perhaps, again makes clear that the new PH was to be used as the catalyst for the rebuilding of america’s defenses, no matter what the disconnect.
You aren't even coherent here. The rebuilding of America's defenses was a counter to Clinton's dismantling them, the WoT is Using America's Military capability to do something. (Good or bad) The US Military Capability is being used and eroded, NOT BUILT UP!
Gravy said:
The disaster in Iraq is the opposite of what the PNAC would want to happen to help effect the military transformation they desired in 2000. So why did those same people lie to us and use fear of terrorism as a pretext to invade Iraq? Because they thought replacing Saddam Hussein would be easy. They didn't listen to the generals, they ignored the intelligence reports, and they expected to be greeted with open arms by the Iraqi people after ousting Hussein. These are the people the CTists think are so clever that they can hide a massive conspiracy. They're the same neo-cons who are under investigation for their petty revenge against Valerie Plame and Joe Wilson. They couldn't even handle THAT without screwing up.
1982 said:
PNAC wanted, with regards to Iraq 2 things- a permanent military base there (done), and Saddam overthrown with US control over oil (done). The rest isn’t so important. It is essential to realise that the war in Iraq is merely one in a lattice of policies forming the WOT. Almost everything laid out in the key findings has been pursued with 911 as the catalyst.
Where, in PNAC, does it say "Bases in Iraq?" We already had bases in

Saudi
Kuwait
UAE
Qatar
Bahrain
Oman
There we have several very confident, matter-of-fact statements about what how the U.S. should impose its military presence on the Mid East. So we established bases in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait to protect our oil interests. But we failed to defend New York and Washington, D.C. against terrorists who were furious at the fact that we had bases in their back yard, and who declared a Jihad against the U.S. because of it.
Again, I’m sorry, but this just betrays a gross misunderstanding of the document. It is stating that we need a new PH- a mass terror attack on US soil, ingrained on the public’s consciousness- in order to catalyse hegemonic aims. Not that we need to prevent a new PH ever happening- this is in fact the opposite of what is said.
More post hoc rubbish. PNAC's paper isn't saying that, in 1998. You are saying it post 9-11. What PNAC analyzed was how hard it was to get Americans behind a foreign war, particularly with Viet Nam as a marker.

1. The doc states that the myriad of transformations needs to happen within one framework, i.e. under one banner. This is, clearly, the WOT. You think this is just a big coincidence not worth investigating?
No, it was clearly the RMA, in 1998, your post hoc rubbish inserts WOT for RMA.
2. The doc also states that the defense policies it outlines need to be crystalised in the president’s mind by October 2001; the time of the QDR, thus implying that a new PH might have to happen by this date. Again, coincidence? I hope you would not think not.
Sorry, again no, Oct 2001 begins the First Budget Cycle in Peacetime that the Pres has as his own to shape the FYDP. His FY 2001 budget was written BY CLINTON. The FY2002 budget was his first.
Sorry about the length, but I hope you can appreciate the focus.
I don't disagree with some of your critiques of the policy, but your assumptions are neither necessary, nor valid, nor are they grounded in the context and time of the paper's writing. You also mistake analysis for statement of intent.

DR
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Merged in from AAH thread
 
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a) The aim of PNAC is to militraily create a platform that will project US hegemony and make the 21st Century the American Century. Thus, it is logical that they would want this platform to be created soon, so they could actively project US hegemony and create an American 21st Century, rather than wait, have it potentially jeopardised by other elements.
b) The fact that the QDR was in Oct 2001, and the elements upon which it was to be based would have to be crystalised in decision makers minds by then; i.e. early, rather than late.
c) A revolutionary change in the geo-political landscape, creating, in the eyes of the authors, stability, peace, security and democracy for the world, is preferable, certainly to power hungry politicians, sooner, rather than later. If anyone is going to argue why this is not the case, I will be very interested to read it.


From the PNAC Statement of principles:

We are in danger of squandering the opportunity and failing the challenge. We are living off the capital -- both the military investments and the foreign policy achievements -- built up by past administrations. Cuts in foreign affairs and defense spending, inattention to the tools of statecraft, and inconstant leadership are making it increasingly difficult to sustain American influence around the world. And the promise of short-term commercial benefits threatens to override strategic considerations. As a consequence, we are jeopardizing the nation's ability to meet present threats and to deal with potentially greater challenges that lie ahead.

We seem to have forgotten the essential elements of the Reagan Administration's success: a military that is strong and ready to meet both present and future challenges; a foreign policy that boldly and purposefully promotes American principles abroad; and national leadership that accepts the United States' global responsibilities.


Of course, the United States must be prudent in how it exercises its power. But we cannot safely avoid the responsibilities of global leadership or the costs that are associated with its exercise. America has a vital role in maintaining peace and security in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. If we shirk our responsibilities, we invite challenges to our fundamental interests. The history of the 20th century should have taught us that it is important to shape circumstances before crises emerge, and to meet threats before they become dire. The history of this century should have taught us to embrace the cause of American leadership.

And how exactly has the Bush administration lived up to the goals of the PNAC? If anything 9/11 and the Bush administration is it's worst nightmare. We a stuck in an expensive situation that has no military benefit for the future and has produced no technological advancements. completely opposite of what the PNAC was looking for.
 
Post #493

Hence the analogy between 911 and PH is valid, and to dispute such would be brainless.

You keep referring to this post as undisputed, but that quote above is yours. This contention of brainless is directed at whom?

I think this is quite simple.

It is, but the multiple paths you have taken have ran circles in the aspect of your reasoning. As I've said before, you have taken simple truths that contradict what you believe is an inside job and twisted them to fit your conviction that some Neocons in the government are complicit.

a) The aim of PNAC is to militraily create a platform that will project US hegemony and make the 21st Century the American Century.

As a matter of fact, it does state that.

the aim of this section is, as has been stated many times, simply to show that a new PH was propitious to policy for PNAC/The Bush Admin.

PNAC favorable to policy for the Bush Administration. Yep, but only if you say
so.
This means right after the election, a conversation would go along the lines of...Well, let's see, who would start this conversation? Cheney? Bush? Rumsfeld? Scooter? Rove? Pearle?
"Hey guys, I see an opportunity here. Remember our latest PNAC document?
What I see here is a chance to make the changes We envisioned in the document to happen more immediately".
"What exactly are you talking about here"?
"What I am saying is that with all these warnings that our intel has received, We can allow an attack to take place here, you know, like it says in the document concerning the catastrophic and catalyzing event?"
"Yes, we know that part"
"If We allow an attack to take place here, then all these changes We want can happen sooner".
"Are you nuts? What about Congress"? They won't go for this"!
"Well, soon We will have the Patriot Act written up, if it isn't done already..I'll give Chertoff a call later to see where he is with that. But getting back to Congress, We'll throw the bill out there and give them a real short time to read it so that they won't have time read it and pass it because they will be so shocked of terrorist attacks...it's perfect and propitious for us".

Your quote down below has prompted Me to give this parody of conversation
shown above.
a) The aim of PNAC is to militraily create a platform that will project US hegemony and make the 21st Century the American Century. Thus, it is logical that they would want this platform to be created soon, so they could actively project US hegemony and create an American 21st Century, rather than wait, have it potentially jeopardised by other elements.

What other elements would jeopardize a long term scenario?

b) The fact that the QDR was in Oct 2001, and the elements upon which it was to be based would have to be crystalised in decision makers minds by then; i.e. early, rather than late.

What were they planning to do about this? And you can't choose your answer from post 9/11 actions. Just remember, this document expressed long term.

c) A revolutionary change in the geo-political landscape, creating, in the eyes of the authors, stability, peace, security and democracy for the world, is preferable,
As stated in the document.

certainly to power hungry politicians, sooner, rather than later.
Congress has much more non-Neocons (Republicans) than the Bush Administration has Neocons and potentially the biggest obstacle to the PNAC plan. So you would have to include them in your case.
 
Thanks, DGM, I have asked the Mods to move it here, apparently the thread where I replied to it was getting dicey with OT and ad homs.

DR

DR, your thread is extremely well detailed and explained with such clarity. Kudo's to you and Mark.
Mjd, your #493 post has been disputed and explained in great detail with some of those simple truths revealing the misconceptions you've had.
 
Madeline Albright, Secretary of State at the time of the supposed “offer”:

“In retrospect, it is clear the Taliban never had any intention of giving bin Laden up or of forcing him to leave.” (testimony to Kean-Hamilton Commission, March 23, 2004)

Large excerpt:


A rather curious omission for the Secretary of State at the time of the supposed offer: that the Taliban offered bin Laden's - what was the phrase - "head on a platter"? Unless of course, NO SUCH OFFER WAS MADE.


EXACTLY.
As I have stated to you already, it is unsurprising that the Clinton administration would not be commenting on this, since the refusal of the offers was perpetrated by the Bush admin. Hence why the article is subtitled:
"How Bush Was Offered Bin Laden and Blew It"

This should not be hard to understand, and applies for Sandy Berger and Bill Clinton too.

Now, you state that such has been "countered" by those people. I will ask you again- show me where such has happened.
 
I hope mjd1982 is not referring to Cockburn and St. Clair. As of 2004, when the story ran, the total paid circulation of Counterpunch was 5,000. (Compared with the India Globe's 10,000. And, say, the Washington Post's 700,000.) Of course, because they are saying something he likes to hear, I would imagine that makes them "the most reputable journalists in the US". :rolleyes:

What's that word? Propitious?
I didnt call them "the most reputable journalists in the US". Please read and think before you post.

Let me be clear- you want to argue that Cockburn and St Clair are disreputable journalists? I dont think that this is an argument that sensible people will take seriously, I'm afraid. They are highly reputable, Cockburn is known even in the UK, and thus to base an argument, even in part, on the fact that they are not, is not going to go very far.
 
As I have stated to you already, it is unsurprising that the Clinton administration would not be commenting on this, since the refusal of the offers was perpetrated by the Bush admin. Hence why the article is subtitled:
"How Bush Was Offered Bin Laden and Blew It"
So herte you say the Clinton Admin. had nothing to do with it...

This should not be hard to understand, and applies for Sandy Berger and Bill Clinton too.
Now they did have something to do with it. :boggled:

Now, you state that such has been "countered" by those people. I will ask you again- show me where such has happened.
He just did, and your schizophrenic response above was how you countered it. Bizarre!
 

Ok, well first thank you for addressing this post. You are the 1st to do so seriously in 1600 posts, which says a lot.

No, regarding this link, I assume that you have posted the wrong link, since all it it is a set of links from another poster. If you can tell me how this has "shredded" anything, please go ahead.

As for your analysis of PNAC, I find some of your embedded assumptions to be smothered in post hoc rationalization.

Ok, fine; I could of course equally say that your statements are smothered in post hoc derationalisation. Let's go ahead and see what you have got.

I read the PNAC piece in early 2001. In 2003, I read Kagan's "On Paradise and Power" and was struck by how he correctly pointed to the loss of political will in NATO. PNAC's capstone document was written in 1998, and as I read it, was aimed at President Clinton, and a direct criticism of his foreign policy, particularly Clinton's having played away a winning hand he had been dealt in the form of the US Military he inherited upon his innauguration.

right, ok...

At core, you miss a key strategic point. After The Wall came down, a significant political movement in the US arose to "stop being the world's policeman" and "accrue the peace dividend." This brought the US Army down from 17 divisions to 12, for example, cut the US Navy down to 300+ from 500+ combatants, reduced the number of ACC Wings to 20, etc.

Tho not aware of these precise details I was aware of the broad point, yes

What the PNAC guys were ragging on about was that the base force, Powells's Bottom's Up Review product, had been discarded, and that the old "Two Major Regional Contingency" force posturing (One in Korea, on in the Mid East) had been eroded to "Win one, hold one" with the allies in the "hold" strategy rather nervous about how long hold would have to go on since they relied on big brother US to help them win. Hold is not a winning strategy, it is a delaying strategy. The CONUS based, globally projected strategy much talked about in the Aspin, Perry, Cohen Sec Def days had a small problem: the strat lift to accomplish it wasn't on hand. LMSR, LPD 17, and C-17 were all in trouble in the mid 1990's, and underfunded, as was Comanche for about a decade before it got cut. It is worth noting that General Shinseki, when he took over as Chief of Staff under Clinton, was a man bound and determined to break the US Army from its love affair with the tank in favor of a lighter armored vehicle, partly to make the US Army more deployable From A CONUS Base.

Ok, so they were opposed to Clinton's strategy and had something different in mind, involving, partly, more funding, right...

The Clinton cuts beyond the base force, to 10 divisions from 12, to 12 CVBG's with <300 ships, and other reductions in force were seen as a signal to Korea that we weren't sincere about defending them IAW current Op Plans that were, as of that writing, agreed. Taking the PNAC analysis as viewed through a paper towel tube is an intellecutally dishonest method of analyzing the paper.

Ok, now we have problems. You see, nothing you have written so far has any refutational substance whatsoever. You have just given a background on the political thought that was swirling around the RAD doc in the 90's, and then you state that my conclusions are intellectually dishonest. What you have stated has zero substance in terms of my conclusions; it doesnt even come close to them.

No, we cannot. We can conclude nothing of the sort. IT shows rather a profound understanding of US military civilian patterns, and the grow/shrink cycles that have gone on since the days of the Revolution, in terms of the military establishment, as well as the powerful Jacksonian strain of American populism who don't want to mess in foreign affairs without powerful reasons. The statemens as written is a clear headed analysis of the political trends in the US. This has been interpreted POST HOC, over and over, as a mission statement pointed to creating a Second Perl Harbor. It requires an agenda to make that interpretation. To say that PNAC's architects leaped at the opportunity that 9-11 created is very true, but that does not prove, other than via the post hoc, ergo prompter hoc fallacy, that PNAC created all of the conditions, through action, that led to the events of that day. LIHOP? Maybe. LIHDTI (Due To Indifference) Perhaps.

Ok, 2 points here that really befuddle me, maybe you can help. 1stly, you try to argue that such a conclusion, as to the desirability for such a transformation to happen soon, cannot be justified, since it shows "a profound misunderstanding" of military civilian patterns. I'm sorry, i do appreciate your diligence and courage in replying to my post at length, but this has zero substance. You have to show why people would want a world changing, peace bringing, democracy, love and happiness exporting change to happen in decades, rather than soon. Just trying to argue from miles in the sky, does little I'm afraid.

2ndly, you state "LIHOP? Maybe". If I have you right, you believe that 911 was "maybe" an inside job? But you dont support the idea of an indepedent investigation to ascertain this??

While Mark's point is not iron clad, it takes a real leap to infer that in 1998, Donald Rumsfeld was not interested in the US strategic interest, but in killing Americans for his own ends. Again, this is you reading something into the paper.

For someone who spends much time arguiing the importance of various rhetorical features, it is actually hypocritical.

More to the point, I dont understand your point. Why was Rumsfeld not interested in US strategy? Why would he be killing people "for his own ends"? Where does 1998 come into this?

Wrong. The PNAC document is a prime example of a political position paper, written to advance a point and to embarass a sitting president, Clinton. Your characterization of it as a bungle, and your characterization of its authors as stupid is a simple ad hom, post hoc relative to 9-11, that has no basis, nor support. That doesn't make PNAC's position, nor its strategy right. It does make your assertion unsupported.

But no. The point I was replying to was the assertion that these guys couldnt be wickedly intelligent (i.e. pulled off 911), and then bumblingly stupid (RAD). If you want to contest this, you very simply have to show that they did not want such a revolutionary transformation to happen as soon as it feasibly could, but rather wanted to wait a few decades. This is the point at hand, and it's starting to look like your not going to grasp it. Whether it was intended to embarrass Clinton is neither here nor there; the Pearl Harbour notion is what matters here.

This is a direct slam on the Clinton era retreat from "handle two MRC's and go to a "win hold win" strategy, since it was cheaper. (MRC = Major Regional Contingency: see Korea and Persian Gulf for one each, with Southeastern Turkey and Europe as less likely, but still big, MRC's.)
The RMA was all about the Silver Bullet idiots trying to wish away the human element in war, and to kill off the tank as an American prime weapons system, while the Critical Regions was a reference to idiot missions like Somalia and FWIW, Bosnia, as nation building exercises. The constabulary duties are explicitly NOT peacekeeping duties. I was inside the belly of the beast when that issue was being kicked around in the mid 1990's.
A direct slam on Clinton's consistent budget cuts, which was creating a cracked to hollow force, due to how it mangled the manpower angle, and kept driving up unit costs in critical programs like C-17, LPD-17, and Comanche by cutting the production runs.

Again this is just elaboration around a theme. I commend you for your inside knowledge, I assume you work with the military in some capacity, but none of what you say is germane to the point I'm afraid.

(I know constabulary duties are not peacekeeping)

1. Try the 1982-1984 Reagan era defense budget increases. Also, during 2001-2003, 9-11 happened and a whole bunch of unprogrammed increases showed up in support of the Afghanistan Operation.

This was an error on my part, it has been apologised for.

You presume that the intention was that from all along, but I will counter with the insider dope that in early 2000, and based on directives from the CNO as recently as 2004, the Rummy Plan before 9-11 was To Cut The Force Yet Again and focus on toys. 9-11 interrupted the RMA.

Read that again.

New toys bought, yes, manpower accounts reduced, YES. 8 CVBG's, down from 12, Crusader gone, and all that RMA bullspit that I won't go into here. Here we were, in a shooting war, up tempo CVBG deployments, and the CNO is being told to cut from 12 to 8 CVBG's. Pilot manpower was being cut, during a shooting war. Unprecedented, eh? I'll add "stupid," while I am at it.

I'm pretty sure this has been dealt with in the original post, with details of the weapons/equipment that have been developed since 911, but would you go into detail as to what you mean by "toys"?

Duh, recycled post-Cold-War-Multi-Polar-World-Rhetoric.

This was obvious before Bush took office, and was an extension of the BMDO's efforts throughout the 1990's to counter the theater, tactical and strategic Ballistic Missile threat thanks to Scud's in 1991 exposing a chink in our armor. I worked some BMD projects in NATO, mid 1990's, and can tell you that this passage is consistent with recognizing that the MAD policy and the two party MAD policies were completely untenable in a multi polar world. Even Clinton saw this.

Not sure what you mean by that.
Given the American government's choice during Clinton's years not to withdraw from global events, but to stay "forward engaged" the PNAC guys recognized what those of us in the military saw the OPTEMPO doing to people: if you want to be deploying a lot, you have to pay for it. That means man to those levels.

This is not rocket science.

Again, as above, al that you have done, is taken what I have said regarding what has been done post 911, and elaborated on it. This does not contest anything.

Yeah. Of course, since Rummy took over, they were doing manpower cuts during a war, 2003-2004, in the Navy among other places.

Right, but the number is still up, as I have stated, from 1.41-1.43

This is rational, given that the pile of troops in Europe were hardly needed. Bring them home, or keep them over seas closer to where they might fight. The latter was chosen, due to how long it takes to deploy from CONUS if you don't fund a massive increase in strateic lift, which neither Bush nor Clinton has done.

Right, as I have said...

The Surface fleet has SHRUNK to below 300 ships since PNAC was written. The sub fleet has SHRUNK since 1998. Comanche is dead. Stryker is made, and V-22 survived. F-22 is alive and well, FWIW.
Nope.
Crusader is dead, JSF is ALIVE AND WELL, and CVX, or at least CV follow on to the Nimitz class, is still around. DDX is running into trouble, again. :p

As I stated in the original post, it is irrelevant if some parts of the plan were not executed properly, since tht is a matter of execution, rather than what we are interested in here, namely design

This program has been in place since mid 1990's, all Bush did was add funding, and keep it from dying as Comanche did.

which was precisely the plan

These policies were not new, friend, and if you bother to check the professional literature of the mid and late 1990's, you will find that a lot of profound thought went into Network Warfare, Cyberwarfare, and Space Policy under Clinton's watch. I couldn't escape the never ending stream of rhetoric on the topic. I even got to brief a flag officer on how vulnerable his HQ was to an EMP weapon delivered by a large motor boat.

I never said it was new. Neither did RAD. They suggest that such plans are integral to US interests, and thu need to be pursued accordingly. A global war against an implacable, unbeatable, invisible, ubiquitous and ever renewing enemy is the perfect environment for such to happen.

Where do you derive this from conclusion from? The RMA predates Bush arriving in DC, and all of this stuff was in work during the mid 1990's. You demonstrate that you don't know what you are talking about. You can't justify BMD with GWOT, you justify it due to Korea, Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, China, ETC, all having ICBM's, and none of them being in the ABM treaty.

This is my bad. What I meant was it is hard to justify them being pursued in the manner that they are, when not in a war environment. This provides the aegis for all military transformations/strategies that are being pursued right now, which is, mor or less, what PNAC had envisaged.

Except that you don't seem to know what it means, nor its context. The RMA was the most over used soundbyte in DC that mean't "do more with less and rely on silver bullets and tech to solve your problems, we are shrinking the force." This crap was alive and well in the late 1990's, within the Clinton Defense Department. All Rummy did was make it more intense, and spend more on some of it, and then fight a war on the cheap while he was trying to cut the manpower bill.

again, which was precislely what RAD called for

A reaction to the over reductions of Clinton which came along side a threefold increase in deployments, Optempo, among reserves and the Operating Forces between 1993 and 1999.

Again, just an elaboration on what I have said

Partly in response to a war.

exactly, as RAD intimated

Afghan and Iraqi Anti Coalition Forces, and whoever else BushCo can tag as "a terrorist."

the last half of your sentence is important- who is a terrorist? Anyone Bus wants to label as such. Olmert? no. Ahmadinejad? Yes. It is not about right and wrong, terror or anti terror. Those who labelling as terrorists will be propitious to the US geo politic will be labelled as such, those who dont, wont.

Don't find much to disagree with there.

No, the WOT is a response to 9-11, and thirty years of failed policy vis a vis terrorists. Rebuilding America's defenses was a peacetime strategy to recapitalize parts of the US Defense capability along Silver Bullet Lines. I spent enough time on flag officer staffs, and dealing with the effects of Silver Bullet thinking from 1995-2005 to see what was really going on, thanks, from the inside. :p

Yes, it was overtly a peacetime document, except for the sentence that states that were there to be a catastrophic and catalysing event, such changes would happen a lot quicker. Thus, the essential point here, is would they have wished such changes to happen quicker or not. I have illustrated why at length in #493, and exhorted the people on this thread to contest it seriously, which no one wants to do. You have not contested the intimations at such a desire that I have expressed in the post you are responding to; if you believe that those nice neo cons wanted to wait an age for such changes to happen, then please tell me why, maybe referencing #493.
[/quote]

A response to a change in METT-T, on a strategic level, and certainly the taking of an opportunity to use emotional leverage from reaction to 9-11.

You'll have tp explain METT-T

THAT DOES NOT MAKE 9-11 an Inside Job, it makes it An Excuse.

I am not arguiing that RAD makes 911 an inside job, I am arguing that it states the propitiousness of a new PH to policy; i.e. it would grant the "excuse" for the neo cons to pursue essentially the policy laid out in RAD.

You aren't even coherent here. The rebuilding of America's defenses was a counter to Clinton's dismantling them, the WoT is Using America's Military capability to do something. (Good or bad) The US Military Capability is being used and eroded, NOT BUILT UP!

Once again, of little relevance, since this is more a question of execution rather than design; in any case, pelase tell me how the militarisation of space, the use of cyberspace as a defense tool, the global posture review etc etc are eroding the US as a military capability.

Where, in PNAC, does it say "Bases in Iraq?" We already had bases in

Saudi
Kuwait
UAE
Qatar
Bahrain
Oman

In the Persian Gulf region, the
presence of American forces, along with
British and French units, has become a semipermanent
fact of life. Though the
immediate mission of those forces is to
enforce the no-fly zones over northern and
southern Iraq, they represent the long-term
commitment of the United States and its
major allies to a region of vital importance.
Indeed, the United
States has for
decades sought to
play a more
permanent role in
Gulf regional
security. While
the unresolved
conflict with Iraq
provides the
immediate
justification, the
need for a
substantial
American force
presence in the Gulf transcends the issue of
the regime of Saddam Hussein.

The continuing challenges from
Iraq also make it unwise to draw down
forces in the Gulf dramatically. Securing
the American perimeter today – and
tomorrow – will necessitate shifts in U.S.
overseas operations.


More post hoc rubbish. PNAC's paper isn't saying that, in 1998. You are saying it post 9-11. What PNAC analyzed was how hard it was to get Americans behind a foreign war, particularly with Viet Nam as a marker.

Errr... 1stly the paper was written in 2000. 2ndly, my point is that is is stating it tacitly; if you want to contest this, I have shown you how. The comment does indeed imply that absent a new PH it woudl be hard to get the US behind a war; hence if a war would speed these changes, a new PH would be propitious to policy.

No, it was clearly the RMA, in 1998, your post hoc rubbish inserts WOT for RMA.

No, because to take an example, "forward basing and presence" is not an examply of RMA, but is of the WOT

Sorry, again no, Oct 2001 begins the First Budget Cycle in Peacetime that the Pres has as his own to shape the FYDP. His FY 2001 budget was written BY CLINTON. The FY2002 budget was his first.

To quote the doc:

This leaves the next
president of the United States with an
enormous challenge: he must increase
military spending to preserve American
geopolitical leadership, or he must pull back
from the security commitments that are the
measure of America’s position as the
world’s sole superpower and the final
guarantee of security, democratic freedoms
and individual political rights. This choice
will be among the first to confront the
president: new legislation requires the
incoming administration to fashion a
national security strategy within six months
of assuming office, as opposed to waiting a
full year, and to complete another
quadrennial defense review three months
after that. In a larger sense, the new
president will choose whether today’s
“unipolar moment,” to use columnist
Charles Krauthammer’s phrase for
America’s current geopolitical preeminence,
will be extended along with the peace and
prosperity that it provides.

R u saying the doc is wrong?

I don't disagree with some of your critiques of the policy, but your assumptions are neither necessary, nor valid, nor are they grounded in the context and time of the paper's writing. You also mistake analysis for statement of intent.

DR

Again, thank you for your time and diligence. Nonetheless, very little of what you have posted is germane to the matter. 1. The similarity of the changes mentioned in RAD to the WOT, 2) The propitiousness of the WOT.

I think I have stated why this was, unfortunately, not the case, and I will look forward to hearing back from you.
 
So herte you say the Clinton Admin. had nothing to do with it...


Now they did have something to do with it. :boggled:


He just did, and your schizophrenic response above was how you countered it. Bizarre!
No, please read the posts to which you are replying before you reply to them.
 
for the same reason I do not need to check with lots of Jewish people to verify that they are not all money grabbing and avaricious; or indeed any pejorative description that would apply to an entire ethnicity, race or nationality. This is called racism, and it should not really be tolerated.

But how do you KNOW that it's racism and not FACT if you DON'T CHECK ?

If someone came to you and said that, proportionally, black people commit more crimes in the US than other "races". Would this be racial slur ? Well, I sure don't know if it's true or not, but we hear that, don't we ? So, in order to know if it's true, should we simple "decide" that it's racism or not ? Or should we have a look at the statistics and see ? It may be true and STILL have nothing to do with skin colour; maybe poverty has something to do with it. But you'll never find out if you just ignore the statement.

NOTE: That was just an example I made up, Mjd. Don't go and try to call me a racist.

Well, thanks for the point, but since there is little substance, I cant really offer a reply

That's because you have no idea what I'm talking about.

No one said that these Afghans were dishonest. He said that hospitality took precedence over honesty, and that a host is bound by honour to defend his guests, no matter what. Do you understand what this entails ?


More hand-waving by you. Do you even know what "poisoning the well" means ?
 
Hence why the article is subtitled:
"How Bush Was Offered Bin Laden and Blew It"

I hope counterpunch never claims that "mjd1982 is a child molester" and gets picked up by other journalists without proof or references. Otherwise you're done for.

2ndly, you state "LIHOP? Maybe". If I have you right, you believe that 911 was "maybe" an inside job?

LIHOP = LET it happen on purpose. LET IT.

If you want to contest this, you very simply have to show that they did not want such a revolutionary transformation to happen as soon as it feasibly could, but rather wanted to wait a few decades.

That's because you assume that the former is necessarily better. And your only "proof" is the use of the word "even".

Again, thank you for your time and diligence. Nonetheless, very little of what you have posted is germane to the matter.

It's amazing how much ability for ignoring other people's points you have.

"Well, that was an interesting post but there's nothing of value in there so bye."
 
Ok, now we have problems. You see, nothing you have written so far has any refutational substance whatsoever. You have just given a background on the political thought that was swirling around the RAD doc in the 90's, and then you state that my conclusions are intellectually dishonest. What you have stated has zero substance in terms of my conclusions; it doesnt even come close to them.

Stop it. Just stop it.

I haven't posted here for a couple of weeks because of a death in the family. I am currently going through the phase that makes even the most noble human endeavors seem pointless and stupid...so you can imagine how I feel about this thread right now.

There are two possibilities: First, you don't really believe what you say you believe, and are just doing this to get attention. I'm leaning towards this explanation, especially given the recent "SylviaRox" episode in another thread.

Second, you are sincere and really think a new investigation is called for. If this is true, then by all means, START YOUR INVESTIGATION. Stop brandishing your sniping, cowardly insults and stop waiting for the same government that you feel is covering it up to grant judicial powers to some fantasy organization with better investigatory resources than the FBI.

I'm not wasting any more time with you.
 
As I have stated to you already, it is unsurprising that the Clinton administration would not be commenting on this, since the refusal of the offers was perpetrated by the Bush admin. Hence why the article is subtitled:
"How Bush Was Offered Bin Laden and Blew It"

This should not be hard to understand, and applies for Sandy Berger and Bill Clinton too.

Now, you state that such has been "countered" by those people. I will ask you again- show me where such has happened.

So Madeline Albright, Sandy Berger, Richard Clarke, and Bill Clinton are all aware of this offer? And passed it on to the Bush administration? So are they complicit in the conspiracy? Or being deliberately misleading in their comments?

:p Look forward to your response, Junior - where you
will ignore, manipulate and select evidence in order to squeeze it into a story that fits nicely with [your] preconceived, but ultimately baseless view of how the world might work.

(I know I've given you a lot of study suggestions which you have shirked, but I would recommend one more - psychological projection.)
 

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