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  The Armageddon Plan
  By James Mann
  The Atlantic Monthly
  March 2004
During the Reagan era Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld were key players in a
clandestine program designed to set aside the legal lines of succession and
immediately install a new "President" in the event that a nuclear attack
killed the country's leaders. The program helps explain the behavior of the
Bush Administration on and after 9/11.
  At least once a year during the 1980s Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld
vanished. Cheney was working diligently on Capitol Hill, as a congressman
rising through the ranks of the Republican leadership. Rumsfeld, who had
served as Gerald Ford's Secretary of Defense, was a hard-driving business
executive in the Chicago area-where, as the head of G. D. Searle & Co., he
dedicated time and energy to the success of such commercial products as
Nutra-Sweet, Equal, and Metamucil. Yet for periods of three or four days at
a time no one in Congress knew where Cheney was, nor could anyone at Searle
locate Rumsfeld. Even their wives were in the dark; they were handed only a
mysterious Washington phone number to use in case of emergency.
  After leaving their day jobs Cheney and Rumsfeld usually made their way to
Andrews Air Force Base, outside Washington. From there, in the middle of the
night, each man-joined by a team of forty to sixty federal officials and one
member of Ronald Reagan's Cabinet-slipped away to some remote location in
the United States, such as a disused military base or an underground bunker.
A convoy of lead-lined trucks carrying sophisticated communications
equipment and other gear would head to each of the locations.
  Rumsfeld and Cheney were principal actors in one of the most highly
classified programs of the Reagan Administration. Under it U.S. officials
furtively carried out detailed planning exercises for keeping the federal
government running during and after a nuclear war with the Soviet Union. The
program called for setting aside the legal rules for presidential succession
in some circumstances, in favor of a secret procedure for putting in place a
new "President" and his staff. The idea was to concentrate on speed, to
preserve "continuity of government," and to avoid cumbersome procedures; the
speaker of the House, the president pro tempore of the Senate, and the rest
of Congress would play a greatly diminished role.
  The inspiration for this program came from within the Administration
itself, not from Cheney or Rumsfeld; except for a brief stint Rumsfeld
served as Middle East envoy, neither of them ever held office in the Reagan
Administration. Nevertheless, they were leading figures in the program.
  A few details about the effort have come to light over the years, but
nothing about the way it worked or the central roles played by Cheney and
Rumsfeld. The program is of particular interest today because it helps to
explain the thinking and behavior of the second Bush Administration in the
hours, days, and months after the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001.
Vice President Cheney urged President Bush to stay out of Washington for the
rest of that day; Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld ordered his deputy Paul
Wolfowitz to get out of town; Cheney himself began to move from Washington
to a series of "undisclosed locations"; and other federal officials were
later sent to work outside the capital, to ensure the continuity of
government in case of further attacks. All these actions had their roots in
the Reagan Administration's clandestine planning exercises.
  The U.S. government considered the possibility of a nuclear war with the
Soviet Union more seriously during the early Reagan years than at any other
time since the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962. Reagan had spoken in his 1980
campaign about the need for civil-defense programs to help the United States
survive a nuclear exchange, and once in office he not only moved to boost
civil defense but also approved a new defense-policy document that included
plans for waging a protracted nuclear war against the Soviet Union. The
exercises in which Cheney and Rumsfeld participated were a hidden component
of these more public efforts to prepare for nuclear war.
  The premise of the secret exercises was that in case of a nuclear attack
on Washington, the United States needed to act swiftly to avoid
"decapitation"-that is, a break in civilian leadership. A core element of
the Reagan Administration's strategy for fighting a nuclear war would be to
decapitate the Soviet leadership by striking at top political and military
officials and their communications lines; the Administration wanted to make
sure that the Soviets couldn't do to America what U.S. nuclear strategists
were planning to do to the Soviet Union.
  Under the Truman and Eisenhower Administrations the U.S. government had
built large underground installations at Mount Weather, in Virginia's Blue
Ridge Mountains, and near Camp David, along the Pennsylvania-Maryland
border, each of which could serve as a military command post for the
President in time of war. Yet a crucial problem remained: what might happen
if the President couldn't make it to one of those bunkers in time.
  The Constitution makes the Vice President the successor if the President
dies or is incapacitated, but it establishes no order of succession beyond
that. Federal law, most recently the Presidential Succession Act of 1947,
establishes further details. If the Vice President dies or cannot serve,
then the speaker of the House of Representatives becomes President. After
him in the line of succession come the president pro tempore of the Senate
(typically the longest-serving member of the majority party) and then the
members of the Cabinet, in the order in which their posts were
created-starting with the Secretary of State and moving to the Secretary of
the Treasury, the Secretary of Defense, and so on. The Reagan
Administration, however, worried that this procedure might not meet the
split-second needs of an all-out war with the Soviet Union. What if a
nuclear attack killed both the President and the Vice President, and maybe
the speaker of the House, too? Who would run the country if it was too hard
to track down the next living person in line under the Succession Act? What
civilian leader could immediately give U.S. military commanders the orders
to respond to an attack, and how would that leader communicate with the
military? In a continuing nuclear exchange, who would have the authority to
reach an agreement with the Soviet leadership to bring the war to an end?
  The outline of the plan was simple. Once the United States was (or
believed itself about to be) under nuclear attack, three teams would be sent
from Washington to three different locations around the United States. Each
team would be prepared to assume leadership of the country, and would
include a Cabinet member who was prepared to become President. If the Soviet
Union were somehow to locate one of the teams and hit it with a nuclear
weapon, the second team or, if necessary, the third could take over.
  This was not some abstract textbook plan; it was practiced in concrete and
elaborate detail. Each team was named for a color-"red" or "blue," for
example-and each had an experienced executive who could operate as a new
White House chief of staff. The obvious candidates were people who had
served at high levels in the executive branch, preferably with the
national-security apparatus. Cheney and Rumsfeld had each served as White
House chief of staff in the Ford Administration. Other team leaders over the
years included James Woolsey, later the director of the CIA, and Kenneth
Duberstein, who served for a time as Reagan's actual White House chief of
staff.
  As for the Cabinet members on each team, some had little experience in
national security; at various times, for example, participants in the secret
exercises included John Block, Reagan's first Secretary of Agriculture, and
Malcolm Baldrige, the Secretary of Commerce. What counted was not experience
in foreign policy but, rather, that the Cabinet member was available. It
seems fair to conclude that some of these "Presidents" would have been mere
figureheads for a more experienced chief of staff, such as Cheney or
Rumsfeld. Still, the Cabinet members were the ones who would issue orders,
or in whose name the orders would be issued.
  One of the questions studied in these exercises was what concrete steps a
team might take to establish its credibility. What might be done to
demonstrate to the American public, to U.S. allies, and to the Soviet
leadership that "President" John Block or "President" Malcolm Baldrige was
now running the country, and that he should be treated as the legitimate
leader of the United States? One option was to have the new "President"
order an American submarine up from the depths to the surface of the
ocean-since the power to surface a submarine would be a clear sign that he
was now in full control of U.S. military forces. This standard-control of
the military-is one of the tests the U.S. government uses in deciding
whether to deal with a foreign leader after a coup d'état.
  "One of the awkward questions we faced," one participant in the planning
of the program explains, "was whether to reconstitute Congress after a
nuclear attack. It was decided that no, it would be easier to operate
without them." For one thing, it was felt that reconvening Congress, and
replacing members who had been killed, would take too long. Moreover, if
Congress did reconvene, it might elect a new speaker of the House, whose
claim to the presidency might have greater legitimacy than that of a
Secretary of Agriculture or Commerce who had been set up as President under
Reagan's secret program. The election of a new House speaker would not only
take time but also create the potential for confusion. The Reagan
Administration's primary goal was to set up a chain of command that could
respond to the urgent minute-by-minute demands of a nuclear war, when there
might be no time to swear in a new President under the regular process of
succession, and when a new President would not have the time to appoint a
new staff. The Administration, however, chose to establish this process
without going to Congress for the legislation that would have given it
constitutional legitimacy.
  Ronald Reagan established the continuity-of-government program with a
secret executive order. According to Robert McFarlane, who served for a time
as Reagan's National Security Adviser, the President himself made the final
decision about who would head each of the three teams. Within Reagan's
National Security Council the "action officer" for the secret program was
Oliver North, later the central figure in the Iran-contra scandal. Vice
President George H.W. Bush was given the authority to supervise some of
these efforts, which were run by a new government agency with a bland name:
the National Program Office. It had its own building in the Washington area,
run by a two-star general, and a secret budget adding up to hundreds of
millions of dollars a year. Much of this money was spent on advanced
communications equipment that would enable the teams to have secure
conversations with U.S. military commanders. In fact, the few details that
have previously come to light about the secret program, primarily from a
1991 CNN investigative report, stemmed from allegations of waste and abuses
in awarding contracts to private companies, and claims that this equipment
malfunctioned.
  The exercises were usually scheduled during a congressional recess, so
that Cheney would miss as little work on Capitol Hill as possible. Although
Cheney, Rumsfeld, and one other team leader took part in each exercise, the
Cabinet members changed depending on who was available at a particular time.
(Once, Attorney General Ed Meese participated in an exercise that departed
from Andrews in the pre-dawn hours of June 18, 1986-the day after Chief
Justice Warren Burger resigned. One official remembers looking at Meese and
thinking, "First a Supreme Court resignation, and now America's in a nuclear
war. You're having a bad day.")
  In addition to the designated White House chief of staff and his
President, each team included representatives from the Departments of State
and Defense and the Central Intelligence Agency, and also from various
domestic-policy agencies. The idea was to practice running the entire
federal government with a skeletal crew during a nuclear war. At one point
there was talk of bringing in the governors of Virginia and Maryland and the
mayor of the District of Columbia, but the idea was discarded because they
didn't have the necessary security clearance.
  The exercises were designed to be stressful. Participants gathered in
haste, moved and worked in the early-morning hours, lived in Army-base
conditions, and dined on early, particularly unappetizing versions of the
military's dry, mass-produced MREs (meals ready to eat). An entire exercise
lasted close to two weeks, but each team took part for only three or four
days. One team would leave Washington, run through its drills, and then-as
if it were on the verge of being "nuked"-hand off to the next team.
  The plans were carried out with elaborate deception, designed to prevent
Soviet reconnaissance satellites from detecting where in the United States
the teams were going. Thus the teams were sent out in the middle of the
night, and changed locations from one exercise to the next. Decoy convoys
were sometimes dispatched along with the genuine convoys carrying the
communications gear. The underlying logic was that the Soviets could not
possibly target all the makeshift locations around the United States where
the Reagan teams might operate.
  The capstone to all these efforts to stay mobile was a special airplane,
the National Emergency Airborne Command Post, a modified Boeing 747 based at
Andrews and specially outfitted with a conference room and advanced
communications gear. In it a President could remain in the air and run the
country during a nuclear showdown. In one exercise a team of officials
stayed aloft in this plane for three days straight, cruising up and down the
coasts and back and forth across the country, refueling in the air.
  When George H.W. Bush was elected President, in 1988, members of the
secret Reagan program rejoiced; having been closely involved with the effort
from the start, Bush wouldn't need to be initiated into its intricacies and
probably wouldn't re-evaluate it. In fact, despite dramatically improved
relations with Moscow, Bush did continue the exercises, with some minor
modifications. Cheney was appointed Secretary of Defense and dropped out as
a team leader.
  After the fall of the Berlin Wall and the Soviet collapse, the rationale
for the exercises changed. A Soviet nuclear attack was obviously no longer
plausible-but what if terrorists carrying nuclear weapons attacked the
United States and killed the President and the Vice President? Finally,
during the early Clinton years, it was decided that this scenario was
farfetched and outdated, a mere legacy of the Cold War. It seemed that no
enemy in the world was still capable of decapitating America's leadership,
and the program was abandoned.
  Where things stood until September 11, 2001, when Cheney and Rumsfeld
suddenly began to act out parts of a script they had rehearsed years before.
Operating from the underground shelter beneath the White House, called the
Presidential Emergency Operations Center, Cheney told Bush to delay a
planned flight back from Florida to Washington. At the Pentagon, Rumsfeld
instructed a reluctant Wolfowitz to get out of town to the safety of one of
the underground bunkers, which had been built to survive nuclear attack.
Cheney also ordered House Speaker Dennis Hastert, other congressional
leaders, and several Cabinet members (including Agriculture Secretary Ann
Veneman and Interior Secretary Gale Norton) evacuated to one of these secure
facilities away from the capital. Explaining these actions a few days later,
Cheney vaguely told NBC's Tim Russert, "We did a lot of planning during the
Cold War with respect to the possibility of a nuclear incident." He did not
mention the Reagan Administration program or the secret drills in which he
and Rumsfeld had regularly practiced running the country.
  Their participation in the extra-constitutional continuity-of-government
exercises, remarkable in its own right, also demonstrates a broad,
underlying truth about these two men. For three decades, from the Ford
Administration onward, even when they were out of the executive branch of
government, they were never far away. They stayed in touch with defense,
military, and intelligence officials, who regularly called upon them. They
were, in a sense, a part of the permanent hidden national-security apparatus
of the United States-inhabitants of a world in which Presidents come and go,
but America keeps on fighting. © : t r u t h o u t 2004
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DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
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