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July 22, 2003 

The Entertainer:

Amid the Ruins of Babylon, Paul Wolfowitz Finds "Final Vindication"

by Michael A. Hoffman II

Paul Wolfowitz is something of an entertaining figure in this writer's
eyes. He represents the Likud wing of meshuganah Israelidom and as such,
he's the main belt of transmission for the Israeli terror-tactic of
assassination which has been openly and shamelessly embraced by George
Bush and the Pentagon's Task Force 20, as part of the Federal
government's profound retreat from traditional American statesmanship.
This retreat began under Ronald Reagan, when the latter tried to
assassinate Muammar Qaddafi in 1986, and ended up killing only his
infant daughter.

Two years later, Col. Qaddafi took his infamous Lockerbie revenge on an
American jetliner with 270 people aboard. The fact that the infanticide
that triggered his revenge is mostly unknown, is testimony to the means
by which our homegrown tyrants rule--by media conspiracy. 

The Reagan/Clinton/Bush assassination policy even extends to the murder
of the families of combatants, and not just the combatants themselves,
as General Tommy Franks admitted at a recent press conference, calling
attacks on the families of Hussein supporters, "a really good mission."
("Franks Details Raid Near Syrian Line," NY Times, July 10, p. A10).

I find Wolfowitz entertaining because I savor the spectacle of a fellow
more mad than the Mad Hatter leading the US Dept. of Defense. Wolfowitz
runs the Pentagon under figurehead Rumsfeld almost solely due to the
electoral muscle of the American Zionist lobby, and not due to any
military acumen on his part. True, certain American boobs from the
misnamed Bible Belt imagine that the Israelis are great warriors and
strategists, but these same people don't intend on being "left behind"
after the "rupture," so presumably it's not too much of a stretch to
question their lucidity.

Now comes Wolfowitz to Iraq, an "evil empire" he said was bristling with
those weapons of you-know-what. Was Wolfowitz even a mite penitent or
contrite while in Iraq? Did he even mention the fabled weapons while he
was there? Perish the thought! The bigger the con, the more necessary it
is to brazenly insist that it's not a con. When Nixon tried this he was
laughed off the stage of history. Bush, Wolfowitz and Rumsfeld are now
into their third month of viewing the supposed apocalyptic landscape of
the Saddamites first hand, and finding it empty of all weapons save
those pesky little rocket-propelled grenades which bedevil our armored
SUVs with Vietcong-like persistence.

The Bush regime's Iraq project has unraveled. Yet in true Zionist
fashion, here is Wolfowitz shuffling around the Arabian desert with an
air of "final vindication." Is there any better evidence of the
delusional mentality of your garden variety Zionist than this charade?

Even whackier are the taxpaying, flag-waving psychos footing the $5
billion a month tab for this made-in-the-synagogue "American foreign
policy," even as the government quietly released details the other day
of its intention to drastically curtail the US postal system by closing
post offices and raising already highly inflated postage rates, as a
result of the "budget crunch."

The US government could efficiently chug along for decades if it were
helmed by crafty Machiavellians of the past like Robert S. McNamara, who
told a 1976 Senate investigation committee, "I just can't understand how
it (US government assassinations of Lumumba, Trujillo and Abdul Karim
Kassem) could have happened."

With village idiot Bush appointing clinically insane spokesmen like
Wolfowitz and Lubavitcher cultist Ari Fleischer, the US is as patently
thuggish and ugly as the hideous Ariel Sharon and his government.
McNamara didn't dare admit that US government assassinations were the
deliberate result of high level White House decisions, but last autumn
Ari Fleischer frankly told the nation that war with Iraq could be
avoided at the cost of "one bullet." Here was open US government
incitement to the assassination of head of state Saddam Hussein by the
President's own press secretary.

With crazies like Fleischer at the Washington wheel, the US government
is losing goodwill and influence around the world, while opening a lid
on a retributive Pandora's box brimming with vendetta, state terror and
popular rage. Pandora's door swings both ways, of course. One can't help
noting in the wake of Fleischer's obscene remark, that the war with Iraq
might also have been prevented with a single bullet aimed at another
head of state besides Saddam.

I confess to being an unabashed Wolfowitz fan. Who better to bring this
filthy, rotten System crashing down upon the lodge brothers than the
Wolf of the White House himself, the exalted policy wonk who, in
actuality, is little more than a tribalist of the most primitive and
chauvinistic dye? No American government can long maintain its prestige
and effectiveness when led by a fanatic (the p.c. term is "activist"),
from the fever swamps of Israeli apartheid.

The ruins of Babylon are found not only in Iraq, but on the banks of the
Potomac.

---------------------------------------

Wolfowitz Sees Challenges and Vindication in Iraq

New York Times, July 22, 2003

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/07/22/international/worldspecial/22WOLF.html

EXCERPT: "Mr. Wolfowitz's five-day journey seemed to produce a welter of
soaring emotions as well as a sense of final vindication... Much of the
trip had the feel of being stage-managed... Throughout the trip, in
conformity with his activist bent, Mr. Wolfowitz referred to Mr. Hussein
as 'tyrant, killer' and 'sadist.' But not once during the entire trip
did he speak to any expert about the hunt for Iraq's unconventional
weapons. That was despite the fact that Iraq's illicit weapons were the
principal reason President Bush decided to wage war to topple Mr.
Hussein's government...An aide to Mr. Wolfowitz said there just was not
time in his busy schedule 'even though he managed to squeeze in an
hourlong tour of the ruins of Babylon."

Mosul, Iraq, July 21 — The fruits of a long personal mission for Paul D.
Wolfowitz were spread out before him today in a modest second-floor
conference room in this bustling city in northern Iraq.

There sat the newly elected mayor and his council — Arabs, Kurds,
Christians and Turkmens. It was the kind of mix of ethnic groups and
faiths that Mr. Wolfowitz has long argued could thrive if Saddam Hussein
was ousted, and Iraq became free and democratic.

Now Mr. Hussein is gone, and Mr. Wolfowitz, the deputy defense secretary
and a main intellectual architect of the Bush administration's Iraq
policy, today expressed both elation at meeting the council — part of a
carefully choreographed visit to Iraq — and sounded a cautionary note to
his new allies in what he says is a running war on terror.

"You don't build a democracy like you build a house," Mr. Wolfowitz said
over tea, honey pastries and water buffalo cheese. "Democracy grows like
a garden. If you keep the weeds out and water the plants and you're
patient, eventually you get something magnificent."

Mr. Wolfowitz crisscrossed Iraq on a fact-finding trip to gauge the road
ahead for America's strategy here, as attacks against United States
troops continued to put pressure on the Bush administration.

In the latest strike on Americans, a roadside bomb exploded today near a
military convoy in north Baghdad, killing one soldier and his Iraqi
interpreter, The Associated Press reported. Three other members of the
First Armored Division were wounded. The American military credited an
Iraqi bystander who helped the troops out of the damaged vehicles with
saving the life of one of the soldiers.

Mr. Wolfowitz's five-day journey seemed to produce a welter of soaring
emotions as well as a sense of final vindication in a man who had warned
since 1979 of the menace posed by Mr. Hussein and his Baath Party
followers — long before anyone feared Iraq's suspected chemical and
biological weapons arsenal.

Much of the trip had the feel of being stage-managed to support those
long-stated views. Reporters joined Mr. Wolfowitz on a tour of a mass
grave in Hilla, where 3,000 bodies had been unearthed from shallow pits.
He led another tour through the notorious Abu Ghraib prison outside
Baghdad where thousands of Iraqis were tortured and executed. Mr.
Wolfowitz has long compared the rule of Mr. Hussein to that of Nicolae
Ceaucescu, the deposed head of Communist Romania. So when the occupation
authority's senior civilian adviser to the Iraqi Foreign Ministry turned
out to be a Romanian diplomat, Mr. Wolfowitz was delighted when the
diplomat agreed with his comparison.

Throughout the trip, in conformity with his activist bent, Mr. Wolfowitz
referred to Mr. Hussein as "tyrant," "killer" and "sadist."

But not once during the entire trip did he speak to any expert about the
hunt for Iraq's unconventional weapons. That was despite the fact that
Iraq's illicit weapons were the principal reason President Bush decided
to wage war to topple Mr. Hussein's government and that about 1,500
military and civilian specialists headed by a two-star Army general
recently arrived to take up the search.

An aide to Mr. Wolfowitz said there just was not time in his busy
schedule "even though he managed to squeeze in an hourlong tour of the
ruins of Babylon." Besides, aides added, that mission now belongs to
American intelligence agencies.

Mr. Wolfowitz said at a news conference here that Washington would
welcome outside help in rebuilding Iraq, but he warned its neighbors and
suspected foreign guerrilla fighters who may have arrived in the country
against meddling.

"I think all foreigners should stop interfering in the internal affairs
of Iraq," he said. "Those who want to come and help are welcome. Those
who come to interfere and destroy are not."

During his tour, Mr. Wolfowitz was greeted as a liberator by two groups
who suffered the most under Mr. Hussein's three-decade rule — Kurds here
in the north and Shiites in the south, especially marshland Arabs — and
he listened to their horrific tales of loved ones tortured or killed by
Mr. Hussein's followers.

Mr. Wolfowitz was, however, also a magnet for complaints that the
all-powerful United States had failed to provide more security, more
electricity and more jobs. "Even though there are many things we can do,
we are not gods, and the things we can do take time," Mr. Wolfowitz told
the leaders here. "It's important for you and your colleagues to teach
patience."

Clearly Iraq is still a very dangerous place. On the ground, Mr.
Wolfowitz traveled in a heavily armed convoy, often with attack
helicopters buzzing overhead. Word of his destinations was not widely
disseminated in advance. His C-130 transport plane detected enemy ground
radar on a flight today to Kirkuk, and discharged flares as a defensive
measure. Crew members said they saw no missiles.

Immense challenges lie ahead — some glimpsed by Mr. Wolfowitz and others
discussed in his many meetings with Iraqis and Americans now trying to
run Iraq. Thieves in Basra tap into pipelines and smuggle oil into
nearby Iran. The slightest rumor of fuel shortages creates huge lines at
gas stations, requiring Army soldiers to stand guard. The country needs
tens of thousands of new police officers.

In Baghdad and Mosul, Iraqis who work for the occupation authority have
received death threats. Foreign guerrilla fighters and terrorists
continue to infiltrate Iraq's porous borders and ambush American troops.
The United States is scrambling to set up a new Iraqi civil defense
force to free up thousands of American troops to conduct antiguerrilla
missions and to put more of an Iraqi face on the postwar security
effort.

Despite the challenges, Mr. Wolfowitz found an ebullient note here as he
wrapped up his trip.

"I feel very encouraged overall that conditions here are much better
than I thought they were before I came," Mr. Wolfowitz said at a news
conference for mainly Kurdish journalists. "The biggest challenge we
face immediately is a very serious security challenge. But I believe
it's just a very small minority of Iraqis and some foreigners who are
doing that.

"You can't deal with the complex situation of Iraq in simply a
one-dimensional way," he said today. "The problem of security is related
to the problem of electricity. They're both related to the problem of
employment. And the question of governance affects everything. We need a
strategy that moves forward on all those things."

Indeed, there is some progress. Here in northern Iraq, the 101st
Airborne Division says it has helped establish interim city and
provincial governments, restore commerce along the Syrian and Turkish
borders, and repair schools, bridges and courthouses.

In the Shiite holy cities of Najaf and Karbala in south-central Iraq —
despite a tense confrontation between Americans and crowds of Iraqis in
Najaf over the weekend — American marines have worked closely with
tribal and religious leaders. At one point, Mr. Wolfowitz gloated that
many of the dire predictions of "uninformed commentators" and Middle
East experts that Shiites would rise up against the American occupation
forces have so far not materialized.

But in Najaf today, protests continued as thousands of followers of the
Shiite cleric Moktada al-Sadr marched to the American headquarters,
shouting slogans against the Iraqi Governing Council and the Americans,
The A.P. reported.

Troops barricaded the building with Humvees. The crowd, some throwing
rocks, finally left after clerics read out an appeal by Mr. Sadr to go
home. Earlier, Mr. Sadr said in a statement that he wanted allied forces
to leave Najaf. Shiite demonstrators also protested today outside an
American base in Baghdad.

During his trip, Mr. Wolfowitz took copious notes, constantly throwing
out questions. He said the barrage of information and impressions over
the five days had felt like drinking out of "two or three fire hoses" at
once, and many questions remain.

None, perhaps, is as pointed as the fate of Mr. Hussein himself.
Military commanders say he is still alive and almost surely in Iraq, and
Mr. Wolfowitz said he would eventually be captured or killed. He
acknowledged this was crucial for ending the state of fear Mr. Hussein
still engenders in many Iraqis.

At a city council meeting in Najaf, one councilman even asked if the
United States was secretly holding Mr. Hussein to ensure that Iraqis did
what the occupation authority wanted. It set off a rare flash of anger,
and strong language, from Mr. Wolfowitz. "We're not playing any games
with Saddam Hussein," he said. "The sooner we can catch that bastard,
excuse me, the better."

<END QUOTE>

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Judaism's Strange Gods (book)
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Secret Societies and Psychological Warfare (book)
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