Opinion

The Return of the Neocons

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by: James Risen, The Washington Independent

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(Illustration: Paul Giambarba)

Bush hawks aggressively working to rewrite accepted Iraq war history.

    Ever since the Rumsfeld era at the Pentagon ended abruptly in the aftermath of the Democratic victory in the 2006 mid-term elections, the civilian hawks who ruled the Defense Dept. during the early years of the Iraq war have remained largely silent. They have not engaged publicly even as their culpability for the Iraq war's myriad failures has congealed into accepted wisdom.

    But for the Pentagon troika most identified with Iraq - former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, former Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz and former Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Douglas Feith - silence has not equaled happiness. It certainly has not meant acceptance of their fate at the hands of the many journalists, former generals and assorted ex-members of the Bush administration who have taken to the cable talk fests and the nation's media outlets to reject and denounce them. Nor does it mean they walk the aisles at Barnes & Noble with equanimity while scanning shelves filled with books that lay the fault for George W. Bush's failed presidency at their doorstep.

    This anti-Pentagon historical narrative is straightforward and seems well established: Wolfowitz and Feith ran a neoconservative frat house while an arrogant, fiddling Rumsfeld roared against anyone who dared try to bring him the truth.

    Neoconservatives - a loose association of pundits, politicians and analysts who put a right-wing spin on American exceptionalism and coupled that with an embrace of the doctrine of pre-emptive war - began pushing for regime change in Iraq in the 1990s. Wolfowitz and Feith brought this desire to oust Saddam Hussein with them when they joined the Bush administration.

    After 9/11, neoconservatives inside and outside the administration argued for war; Washington must act because Saddam had weapons of mass destruction and might share them with terrorists. Inside the government, Rumsfeld, not a neoconservative himself, embraced and advanced these arguments, following the lead of President George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney. Perhaps Rumsfeld also sensed that the war in Afghanistan had been too quick and remote to serve as a true demonstration of U.S. power in the Middle East.

    And so, during the critical 18 months between the Sept. 11 attacks and the invasion of Iraq, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and Feith were united at the forefront of the administration's march to war.

    Five years later, 4,000 young Americans have died. No Pentagon leaders have been so thoroughly repudiated since the days of Robert McNamara and the Vietnam War.

    When the Iraq war was young, and they were at the height of their power, few men in America seemed less concerned by or more disdainful of their public critics. The image created by a compilation of Rumsfeld's most famous quotations, words that will surely appear in the first paragraphs of his obituary - "stuff happens," "democracy is messy," "You go to war with the Army you have" - is of a man too busy and important to do anything other than casually mock the little people getting in his way.

    Perhaps being out of power makes one more susceptible to the slings and arrows; perhaps at night they wake with visions of a future in which some young filmmaker comes to them with a request to remake "The Fog of War." For whatever reason, it is clear that the incoming fire from the left, right and center has finally gotten to be too much. Feith, in particular, is now willing to reveal how much it all has hurt.

    "You wind up having the first, second and third drafts of history shaped by the first set of leaks," Feith lamented. "You can imagine, from my point of view, that is grim to see."

    Now, the Rumsfeld team is starting to fight back. Rumsfeld recently announced that he is writing his memoirs, while Feith's account, "War and Decision: Inside the Pentagon at the Dawn of the War on Terrorism," came out this spring.

    In a series of lengthy interviews over several weeks, Feith explicitly stated that his objective in writing his book was to start the process of altering the accepted history of the Iraq war, to adjust the Rumsfeld team's place in history. He wants to change the narrative - before it is too late.

    Feith sees his book as nothing less than the opening salvo in what he and many of his allies hope will be a major and prolonged campaign by Bush administration hawks to develop a new school of revisionist history of the early 21st century, in which they will be heroes, rather than the villains. They see this fight for historical dominance as the last battle of the war in Iraq.

    How far this devolves into the "stabbed in the back" school of history remains to be seen. But the outlines are already clear.

    Feith argues that the Pentagon team's historical standing has been victimized by its unilateral disarmament in the leak and access wars of the Bush administration, even as their foes at the State Dept. and the Central Intelligence Agency whispered to the press about the evil men at the Pentagon. Rumsfeld so hated leaks and leakers, Feith says, that the Pentagon team allowed themselves to be Swiftboated by the forces under Secretary of State Colin L. Powell and CIA Director George Tenet.

    "It caused enormous damage to me personally," Feith said. "I wasn't in a position to contradict false and damaging things said about me."

    And yet, he added, top State and CIA officials were too cowardly to raise any objections to the war during White House meetings.

    Feith does not view this as journalists did at the time - which was that many in the Bush administration were reluctant to criticize Iraq policy out of fear of retribution from a powerful vice president and an intimidating secretary of defense. He sees hypocrites who went along with the war, who told the president to his face that they supported his policies, but then through bureaucratic petulance made sure that critical decisions were never made, that paralysis was the order of the day. Meanwhile, they sought to convince friends outside the administration that they were not really allied with the neoconservatives.

    "What I find interesting is that they chose to not take on the strategic questions in the Situation Room when they had a chance," says Feith. "If Powell or Tenet, or somebody like that, wanted more meetings, more debates, they could have had them."

    Instead, State and CIA sulked and pouted and refused to collaborate, effectively sabotaging post-war planning, Feith says. The best-laid plans for Iraq's political reconstruction put forth by the Pentagon were left stillborn in a confused inter-agency process in the weeks leading up to the invasion, he argues; and no one, certainly not National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, ever tried to bring order out of the bureaucratic chaos.

    Yet it is Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and Feith who were left holding the bag for the failures in Iraq, while pretty much everyone else seems to have skated from the judgment of history, Feith seethes. "The now-standard story portrays the president and his supporters in the administration as militaristic and reckless, closed-minded and ideological, thoughtless at best and even dishonest - and hell bent on war with Iraq from the administration's inception," he writes in his book. It is a false narrative, he writes, that "has swept the field."

    Other top officials from Rumsfeld's inner circle agree that the truth is far more complex and has yet to come out. "The pundits have it pretty much wrong about Rumsfeld," said retired Air Force Gen. Richard Meyers, chairman of the joint chiefs during Rumsfeld's tenure, who is now also writing his memoirs. "I think they have it 85 percent wrong. Not many people who have written about Rumsfeld have worked with him and been in the room. I don't think anybody has captured it yet."

    Wolfowitz is pleased that the counter-offensive has begun, noting that he believes that Feith, through his book, finally, "explodes some of the myths that have become conventional wisdom." Wolfowitz added, "it's a beginning point," for a serious discussion.

    As the first out of the gate with a book, Feith is setting the tone for the Pentagon counter-campaign. He begins by recognizing the need to tackle big, damning issues head on. So he focuses on what he describes as the most damaging lie - that the Pentagon team was trying to anoint Ahmed Chalabi as ruler of Iraq.

    "I'm putting out a bold challenge - I have gone through the documents, senior level Pentagon documents, and I can't find any documents supporting the extremely important conspiracy charge that we were plotting to anoint Chalabi," said Feith. "It is frustrating to me to deal with these canards, because no senior person at the Pentagon was proposing that."

    As head of the largest Iraqi exile group operating in the West in the years before the invasion, Chalabi had gained prominence through his success at convincing key political leaders in Washington and London of the rightness of ousting Saddam. Yet he had also won powerful enemies, notably at the CIA, where officers who worked with Chalabi had concluded that he was a liar and a crook. During the run-up to the 2003 invasion, Chalabi's group, the Iraqi National Congress, began to force-feed Washington many Iraqi "defectors," who claimed to have information about Saddam's supposed weapons of mass destruction. His information found its way through the Pentagon right to the president, and was crucial in bolstering the public case for war.

    But Chalabi's star began to fall when it turned out that there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, and that his defectors had been feeding disinformation to the U.S. intelligence community. The Americans broke with him in 2004, when the CIA and the National Security Agency alleged that he had told Iran that the United States had broken their codes.

    His relations with the Bush administration have run hot and cold since. But it is now clear that the men who ran the Pentagon at the time of the invasion are eager to disown Chalabi.

    That is easier said than done. Feith recognizes that the notion the Pentagon wanted Chalabi to rule Iraq is not only accepted as fact today, it was conventional wisdom within large swaths of the Bush administration during the run-up to the war. And the impression that Pentagon neoconservatives were pushing a huckster destroyed the Rumsfeld team's ability to gain acceptance of its post-war plans throughout the administration, he argues.

    "The view that we were doing that was enormously important in influencing policy at the time," Feith said, "because the State Department and CIA opposed a series of specific measures that were designed to facilitate the political transition and general reconstruction of Iraq because they saw them all through their particular prism of antagonism to Chalabi. Every time we denied that we were trying to anoint Chalabi, people at State or CIA would say that was just part of the cover-up of our conspiracy."

    Feith adds that the Pentagon leadership was actually agnostic about Chalabi. "We didn't think of ourselves as pro-Chalabi," Feith insisted, "but we didn't think of ourselves as anti-Chalabi, either."

    Rather than simply pushing to anoint Chalabi, Feith says his office developed a formal plan for political reorganization built around an entity to be known as the Iraq Interim Authority. The plan - abandoned by the White House in the immediate aftermath of the invasion - called for a temporary government that would include U.S. officials, leading Iraqi exiles and Iraqis who had remained in Iraq during Saddam Hussein's rule. Chalabi was to be among the exiles playing a leading role, but Feith insists that no one in the Pentagon leadership ever sought to impose Chalabi as the leader.

     He says that the Chalabi conspiracy charge can be disproven by the fact that the two men sent to run the post-war reconstruction - former general Jay Garner, followed by former ambassador L. Paul Bremer - were never given orders to anoint Chalabi. "If they were not told to favor Chalabi, then there couldn't have been a conspiracy," Feith said. "Then there was no drive shaft connecting the engine to the wheels."

    Both Garner and Bremer said in interviews that they were never given directions by the Pentagon to anoint Chalabi. Garner, briefly in charge of reconstruction in Iraq after the invasion, said, "I heard Rumsfeld say several times I have no candidate," for ruler of Iraq. "I never saw any inclination he was pushing Chalabi."

    Garner observed that "Feith, I think, was a friend of Chalabi. And he took me through the positives and negatives of the exiles and candidates, but he never told me to appoint Chalabi. It never happened that he said, 'Make Ahmed the premier.' But he respected him. He told me that he, Perle (Richard Perle, former chairman of the Defense Policy Board for Rumsfeld) and Wolfowitz had met frequently with Chalabi in the past to discuss the freedom of Iraq."

    "For me, I don't like Chalabi," Garner volunteered. "He and I instantly disliked each other. He's a crook, a man who can't be trusted."

    Bremer added, "Nobody ever said to me the plan was for Chalabi to have the job. Nobody ever told me to put Chalabi in power."

    In an interview from Baghdad, Chalabi also insisted, "I know of no discussion at all between me and the Pentagon or any one in the U.S. government and anyone close to me, to install me in any capacity in Iraq." He complained that "the adversaries of Feith and Wolfowitz seemed to fear that I would emerge as a leader in post-war Iraq, and so they had an ABC doctrine - 'Anybody But Chalabi.'"

    But while Feith sees this as solid evidence dispelling the Chalabi conspiracy charge, his legion of critics from the Bush administration remain unconvinced. They say these arguments - no orders to Garner and Bremer, no Pentagon documents supporting Chalabi's ascension - are only used by Feith as part of a legalistic effort to obscure what happened.

    "Do you really think they would have written it down?" asked one former senior administration official.

    The critics say that, to varying degrees, Wolfowitz and Feith at the Pentagon, Cheney at the White House, and Perle on the outside all promoted Chalabi before the war. But, they were unable to convince either Rumsfeld or, more important, Bush.

    "Bush was very clear," said one former top administration official, critical of the neoconservatives, "he said, I will not put my thumb on the scales. He wasn't going to favor one guy."

    And no matter how badly Wolfowitz, Feith and the others might have wanted Chalabi, they didn't have the power to install him.

    Perle, perhaps Chalabi's most vocal and influential patron in Washington at the time of the invasion, said in an interview that he believes that the fact that Rumsfeld was never a Chalabi supporter was critical - since that meant the Pentagon was not going to push him on Bush.

    "Rumsfeld's view was that the cream will rise to the surface," recalled Perle. "He did not want to get into the business of picking leaders for Iraq, although I don't think he ever thought that meant Iraq would be leaderless. But Rumsfeld never fought for Chalabi. The idea that he was the Pentagon's boy is wrong. One person made decisions at the DOD, and that was Don Rumsfeld. Those people who kept saying the Pentagon's policy was Chalabi didn't understand how DOD worked."

    Asked whether he thought Feith and Wolfowitz would have installed Chalabi if they had been in charge, Perle said: "Early on, they would have supported a government-in-exile and the INC [the Iraqi National Congress, Chalabi's group] would certainly have been at the center of it. And to do it right there would have had to have been a transparent process.... They certainly thought that Chalabi was, if not the most competent Iraqi, at least in the top two or three."

    But Chalabi was not installed, and a U.S. occupation, through Bremer's Coalition Provisional Authority, was launched instead.

    An anti-American insurgency followed, and now, five bloody years later, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and Feith are just beginning their long struggle for historical redemption.

    --------

    James Risen is an investigative reporter for The New York Times and the author of "State of War: The Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration." He won a Pulitzer Prize for national reporting, for his pieces about government surveillance programs.

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Comments

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A bunch of murderers

A bunch of murderers pointing at each other screaming "he did it!" They should all hang.

The (largely) untold story

The (largely) untold story is the relationship of the neocons to the Israeli Lobby (see, The Israeli Lobby and U. S. Foreign Policy, Meersheimer and Walt).Beginning at p. 238, the authors demonstrate the connection between Feith, Wolfowitz, Pearle, Bolton etc and the Lobby and the push to topple Sadam. The extraordinary thing is the current push to take military action against Iran which AIPAC is behind and which our cowardly Congress is unwilling to oppose. Unless and until the Lobby's influence on our foreign policy is understood and recognized, we will continue to adopt policies adverse to our national interests.

Feith is a liar plain and

Feith is a liar plain and simple. The CIA objected a great deal to the meetings in Rome (when they found out) the 16 words and to the Office of Special Plans and the stove-piping of false WMD intelligence into the White House. Feith should be in prison for his part in lying our nation into an unnecessary and immoral war. plain and simple

What the author fails to

What the author fails to mention is the close ties of the neocons with the pro-israeli lobby who was chomping at the bit to overthrow Saddam. Former Treasury Sec. O'Neill wrote a book in which he mentioned that invading Iraq was on the agenda of the first cabinet meeting with the Bush Administration in 2001. It is clear to anyone that it was decided early on to invade Iraq based on pure ideology, and then Feith's Office of Special Plans was created to start the flood of phony intelligence... and the rest is history.

A PNAC neocon saying that

A PNAC neocon saying that CIA should've spoken up? Please, this guy was part of the office of special plans where the intelligence was cherry picked and distorted to suit the needs. Neocons naturally don't seem to want to take any responsibility for their own actions even though the agenda pre-dated 9/11 and the blueprints were written.

Why give this crap press at

Why give this crap press at all? As a few others have noted, it seems telling that the first thing to be disputed by Feith is that the neo-cons were behind Chalabi (who cares). And then to blame others (equally guilty pawns) for not opposing the DOD's plans as reasons for his and his PNAC cronies forgiveness in the historical record... PLEEEAAASE! How about starting the revisionists record with how the Iraq war was a good idea... seems he doesn't want to tackle that one now, maybe in 5 years.

Fieth should have his say,

Fieth should have his say, but a book is the wrong medium, it should be at a war crimes trial

Feith blaming the CIA is

Feith blaming the CIA is laughable. Why didn't he speak up? Oh, yeah, he wanted all this to happen: the colonization of Iraq for its oil, and a huge Amerikan military presence in between Iaran and Israel!

"There are three sides to

"There are three sides to any story - your side, my side, and the truth." I'll listen, but the fact remains that they acted in a manner both dishonest and despicable, and both aided and abetted the criminal Bush regime. Why they are not writing their memoirs out of prison cells is beyond me.

I respect James Risen very

I respect James Risen very much, and value his opinion and comments very much. Whoever is correct as to the true account--Douglas Feith or the neo-con critics--is not so important, perhaps. Whoever is right, the invasion of Iraq, and all the Bush-Cheney Administration's lies in the lead up to the war in Iraq represent a colossal and impeachable failure of leadership of unprecedented proportions! I notice that nearly all the attempts of Congress to assert its power to investigate the many crimes of Bush and Cheney are so ineffective that it's pathetic. I'm just hopeful that Congress will finally do what it should, and impeach both Bush and Cheney.

The neocons are accused

The neocons are accused of (1) Lying and propagandizing the USA into a war of aggression, (2) Running the USA as if it were their and their billionaire cronies' own private piggy bank, (3) Turning the US Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and the Geneva Convention into confetti because those control freaks see them as a blockade on their way back into pre-Magna Charta 12th century, when earth was still flat and monarchy was still absolute (to name just the worst three), and their defense focuses only on the Chalabi question?

These are the same people

These are the same people that cut their teeth on forming U.S. foreign policy and a broad spectrum of government initiatives during the Nixon administration. Check out the resumes of these fools and you'll see that many of them have held sway in the Ford, Reagan, Bush I and the current criminal cabal that pose as federal civil servants. The time has come to evaluate the actions of them, weigh the damage they have done and hold Congressional hearings and federal investigations to decide how best to punish them.

This is a useful but

This is a useful but incomplete analysis of how history is being shaped in the nearly seven years after 9/11. How can Risen not include Cheney's central role from the early '90s to the present as a key policy creator? Cheney's long friendship with Rumsfeld and participation in the key Project for a New American Century (PNAC) activities form a central part of the neoconservative story. While the Rumsfeld troika may be out of office now, Cheney continues unabated in forming the final acts--both theatrically and in practice--of the Bush regime. The tragedy for historians and American citizens is that so much documentation has been, is being, and will be destroyed by paper shredders and reformatting/destruction of computer hard drives--no more frantically, I'm sure, than in the VP's offices let alone the Pentagon and US State and DOD offices in Iraq.

The press not only failed to

The press not only failed to do its job during the selling of the war. It has to this day not admitted responsibility. And, worse, is, without comment or investigation, repeating the administration's anti-Iran propaganda in preparation for yet another war. Plenty of blame should also be meted out to our spineless congress. In spite of being given a mandate to end the Iraq war in 2006, the Democrats haven't even bothered to force the Republicans to fillibuster war-ending legislation. In the short run this may be smart politics, but history will judge them harshly. But before that, they will disillusion the legions of new recruits Obama has brought to the political arena. Now is not too soon to begin to say our goodbyes to this new generation.

I find it highly ironic that

I find it highly ironic that those who actively pushed at every opportunity for the Iraq war are now blaming others in the government for not opposing them strongly enough. While I am sure there is plenty enough blame to go around in the State Dept. and the CIA (who can forget both Powell's and Tenet's shameful performances), it is incredible disingenuous and galling that morons like Feith, ideologues like Wolfowitz, and boneheads like Rumsfeld are trying to peddle the lie that they were the good guys in this whole sorry mess. These three chowderheads bypassed established protocols for intelligence and ignore serious recommendations from more experienced officers to plunge us into the war that they wanted. As far as I'm concerned, they can just suck it.

The neocons apparently have

The neocons apparently have the backing of the media barons, and by extension of the mainstream of the ruling class. I never cease to be shocked by the brazenness, and near-invisibility, of their manipulation of the news. The following story was right out in the open, for anyone to see, but no news service or outlet picked it up: Is a New Congressional Resolution Declaring War with Iran? http://www.payvand.com/news/08/jun/1142.html H. Con. Res. 362: escalation of aggression towards Iran http://www.dailykos.com/story/2008/6/20/2556/57619/151/538861 It already has 160 cosponsors and could pass under rules that allow only 20 minutes of debate! Pass it on to your address list!

Unfortunately, Feith is

Unfortunately, Feith is dead-on in his criticism of the CIA and press as being too cowardly to speak against the war during the planning stages. The author says they were too terrified to speak out from fear of retribution from a powerful VP and SOD. He is right, they were cowards, and the blame for the war lies at their feet as much as the neo-com troika.

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