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BLUEPRINT
FOR WORLD DOMINATION
The
International Inquiry Into 9/11, Phase 2, Toronto, 26 May,
2004
By
Bruce K. Gagnon
There is nothing
like personal experience to inform a person. During my time
in the Air Force during the Vietnam war, while stationed
at Travis AFB in California, I was exposed to the peace
movement for the first time. I had come from a career military
family and had been the Vice-chair of the Okaloosa County,
Florida Young Republican Club at 16 while working on the
Nixon campaign. My first roommate at Travis AFB turned out
to be a leading GI-resistance movement organizer in the
barracks and at night there were meetings of anti-war GI's
or Black Panthers from the cities talking about racism.
I was to get the education of my life.
When the Pentagon
Papers came out, thanks to the courage of Daniel Ellsberg,
all my patriotic illusions were shattered. Here was the
U.S. government's own account of how it had fabricated the
pretext to drag our nation into the Vietnam war and how
it was literally sold to the public by manipulating the
media and Congress. My life was never the same after that
and I've been a professional organizer since 1978, first
trained by the United Farmworkers Union and then leading
peace and justice organizations ever since. In 1992, I and
a couple of others created the Global Network Against Weapons
& Nuclear Power in Space in order to try to prevent the
next round of the arms race from moving into the heavens.
Today I live in Maine and travel all over the U.S. and around
the world talking about how space technology now allows
the U.S. to militarily control the entire planet. With space
satellites now in place, the U.S. can see everything on
the earth, hear everything on the earth, and ultimately
target anyone or anyplace on the earth below.
The day after
9-11, I went to my world atlas to look up the Central Asian
countries that I admittedly knew very little about. What
I found is common knowledge these days. They have some of
the largest deposits of oil and natural gas in the world
in this region. Uzbekistan has the world's largest goldmine.
My Pentagon
Papers experience had taught me to always ask the next
question. Who? What? Why? When? How? For me, 9-11 unleashed
a slew of new questions about U.S. foreign and military
policy.
Five days after
9-11, I boarded a very empty airplane in Gainesville, Florida
to fly to Cleveland in order to speak about space to a Rotary
Club in a Republican neighborhood. While reading the Gainesville
Sun newspaper on the plane, an AP story jumped out at me.
The piece quoted an "unidentified" Pentagon spokesman who
said, "We've been planning this war for the last three years."
Of course the Pentagon spokesman was referring to the almost
immediate discussion that the U.S. had to respond to 9-11
by bombing and invading Afghanistan. Memories of reading
the Pentagon Papers flashed through my mind.
I have another
personal experience that gives an indication why I am here
today. A few years ago I was sitting in my office, then
in Gainesville, watching CNN and they interrupted programming
to say that a private plane carrying the golfer Payne Stewart
had taken off from Florida and had lost contact with ground
control. CNN reported that the military had immediately
scrambled two jets, as they routinely do in circumstances
where planes lose contact with the control tower they informed
us, and that the military pilots had seen Stewart and his
pilot slumped over the cockpit controls. It was theorized
that their on-board oxygen had malfunctioned and they had
died. The plane would now crash, and the military jets were
to escort the plane to its final crash site and only shoot
it down if it was to pose any threat to a population center.
CNN stayed with the story and tracked the progress of the
declining plane until it crashed into an open field somewhere
in the empty countryside of a southern state.
On 9-11, for
some reason that defies logic and standard operating procedure,
three big American airliners filled with people lost contact
with the control tower, dramatically changed course, and
no fighter planes were scrambled until history had been
made.
We know that
the Chairman of the Pentagon's Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen.
Richard Myers was meeting with then Sen. Max Cleland on
capitol hill the morning of 9-11. Planes were crashing into
the World Trade center towers and the Pentagon and they
went right on with their meeting. It was not until after
the tragic episodes had occurred that Gen. Myers and NORAD
commander, Gen. Ralph Eberhart made the decision to scramble
jets. By then it was essentially all over. This clearly
suggests that the two generals knowingly violated mandatory
procedures that call for direct military intervention when
such an instance of hijacking occurs. Why did they not take
action that fateful day? Who ordered them to stand down?
Surely they would not have made such a monumental decision
on their own. The Pentagon does not have to seek permission
to scramble jets during hijackings, they are required to
do so.
Very recently,
on March 23, I was listening to NPR coverage of the 9-11
commission hearings in Washington and Secretary of War Donald
Rumsfeld was being questioned. The one woman on the panel,
Jamie Gorelick, asked Rumsfeld why Pentagon jets were not
scrambled to intercept the hijacked planes. He did not answer
the question. He droned on about some other nonsense. No
attempt to follow-up was made. I was not totally surprised.
Not long after I heard a Washington insider say that the
9-11 commission hearings were theater. He said all the questions
had already been asked in private sessions. The public sessions
were just theater for the public.
In 2000 a report
was written by the now well known right-wing think tank
called the Project for a New American Century. This
is an organization which Cheney, Rumsfeld, Jeb Bush, Wolfowitz,
Armitage, Bolton, Abrams, Woolsey, Libby, and William Kristol,
among others, belong to. The report called Rebuilding
America's Defenses: Strategy, Forces and Resources for a
New Century asked "Does the U.S. have the resolve to
shape a new century favorable to American principles and
interests?"
What are the
principles and interests that PNAC refers to? Could they
be corporate "control and domination" of the world? Could
they be the advancement of conditions that creates more
of a market for the number one industrial export of the
U.S. today - namely weapons? Could it be control of the
oil and natural gas fields not only in the Middle East but
also throughout Central Asia, Africa, and Latin America?
PNAC answers
these questions by saying this: "The U.S. is the world's
only superpower, combining preeminent military power, global
technological leadership, and the world's largest economy…America's
grand strategy should aim to preserve and extend this advantageous
position as far into the future as possible."
But to undertake
such a grand and sweeping strategy would be an enormously
expensive and highly controversial undertaking- not only
at home but all over the world. And PNAC knows that. So
they threw this bit into the report saying that accomplishing
this transformation of the world was "likely to be a long
one, absent some catastrophic and catalyzing event - like
a new Pearl Harbor."
We now hear from
Bush administration insiders, like former Treasury secretary
Paul O'Neil and Richard Clark, the former counter terrorism
chief under Clinton and Bush, that the Bush team was preparing
for war with Iraq from their first days in office. Once
selected, George W. Bush began to implement the PNAC strategy
- by withdrawing from the 1972 ABM treaty that outlawed
testing and deployment of "missile defense," dramatically
increasing military spending, and plans for military transformation.
In fact, the first trip that Donald Rumsfeld took in his
new job as Secretary of War was to go to Berlin for a NATO
Defense ministers meeting. Along with him he took Henry
Kissinger, Sen. John McCain, and Sen. Joseph Lieberman.
Lieberman stood beside Rumsfeld and told the NATO military
leaders that "We have bipartisan support for "missile defense"
in the U.S. so your countries had better get on-board or
get left behind."
Then came 9-11
and the gloves came off. In his State of the Union speech
in 2002 Bush declared that "Our war on terror is well begun,
but it is only begun." By June of that same year he signaled
his support for pre-emptive war saying that the U.S. was
"ready for preemptive action when necessary to defend our
liberty and to defend our lives."
Everything, thanks
to 9-11, was now in place. Who could have imagined that
using conventional democratic means - such as holding national
debates that involved the taxpayers and Congressional hearings
and voting - an administration could have successfully committed
so much money and so many lives to such a radical new foreign
and military policy? But the debate was never heard. It
was all done ipso-facto by claiming to be a response to
9-11.
I am reminded
of another Bush administration and another invasion. Following
the demise of the former Soviet Union there was much debate
in the U.S. about the "peace dividend." People were saying
we would not have to keep these incredible high levels of
military spending any longer, we could stop spending billions
a year on NATO. We could take care of things back at home.
But all that was lost in a minute as George Bush I terrorized
Panama, killing several thousand innocent civilians in the
El Chorrillo neighborhood as U.S. troops burned it to the
ground. Manuel Noriega was apprehended in "Operation Just
Cause" and talk of a peace dividend was put to rest.
And there is
much more to come. Because of computerization, mechanization,
and robotics we now have superfluous populations around
the world. Rather than share the great wealth and the diminishing
resources on earth (like oil and water) the corporate power
structure intends to impose a new 21st century form of feudalism
that will insure maximum corporate profits and minimum social
progress for the people. In order to "control and dominate"
the growing legions of "have-nots," predicted by the Pentagon
in the U.S. Space Command document called Vision for
2020, new high-tech space technologies will be utilized
and a fast moving military will be forward deployed to new,
smaller, "lily pad" bases in global hot spots. The U.S.
now rents or owns more than 700 bases in about 130 countries,
in addition to the hundreds of bases in North America.
Key regions like
Africa, Central Asia, South America, and the Middle East
that have scarce natural resources, though not yet under
corporate control, will see a string of new bases established,
all presumably to fight the war on terrorism. Deputy Secretary
of War and PNAC member Paul Wolfowitz told the New York
Times in 2002 that the function of the new outposts "may
be more political than actually military." The new bases
he insisted would "send a message to everybody, including
strategically important countries like Uzbekistan, that
we have a capacity to come back in and will come back in…."
China and Russia
will be militarily surrounded and contained. In order to
pay for this perpetual war, cut backs in human needs spending
(social security, health services, education, etc) will
be necessary in all the "industrial" or "first world" societies
as the allies are brought in at some level or another to
help pay for and implement this new global vision.
The Democrats
argue around the edges of the policy but essentially agree
with U.S. corporate empire - the new Rome. They only disagree
on the way the policy is implemented - they'd rather see
a "friendly sheriff" than the macho tin-horn cowboy style
presented by Bush and his posse.
Hundreds and
hundreds of billions of dollars will be spent on Star Wars
research and development and both parties will support this
spending. The space-based laser, what the Pentagon calls
the Death Star, is now being developed and will be powered
with nuclear reactors. Bush will say let's deploy right
away and the Democrats will say let's test a bit more before
we deploy. Both are hostage to the weapons corporations
who generously donate to the political campaigns of compliant
politicians. Gen Richard Myers, the current chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff was previously the commander of
the U.S. Space Command, which has been put in charge of
giving the U.S. "full spectrum dominance" of the earth and
space battlefield. His promotion to head the Joint Chiefs
shows the ascendancy of Star Wars within the military hierarchy.
And now Canada is being recruited to join, and help pay
for, this new Star Wars program.
Permanent bases,
14 of them, are now being established in Iraq where U.S.
troops will be deployed for years to come - remembering
George W.'s words that "The American people had better be
patient, it's going to be a long, long war."
The U.S. is a
violent society that is addicted to war and military spending.
And like any addict we must have our regular fix to keep
us going. We must always have an enemy and if necessary
they can be created. And most importantly, we must remain
in denial about our addiction. We cannot look at ourselves
in the mirror for fear of what we might find standing there.
But there are people who are clamoring for treatment. They
want to acknowledge the reality of our disease. And these
voices will not go away.
I can assure
you that for a year or more, after 9-11, every place I spoke,
someone in the audience during the Q & A would ask me what
really happened on 9-11. The entire story of 9-11 might
not ever be fully known but people are thinking about it
and have begun to develop their own thoughts on what happened
and why. Legions of people around the world are highly suspicious
of "official explanations" and the demand for the truth
will only grow. The 9-11 families are leaders in the citizen
movement that seeks real answers to serious questions. Events
like this International Inquiry are the real democracy these
days.
People often
ask me what we can do about the corporate controlled media.
I tell them we have to become the media. And when we have
a corporate controlled Congress and a 9-11 Commission who
is replaying the Warren Commission theme, we the people
have to become the body that explores the issue and asks
the tough questions.
Could it be
that one important purpose of the notorious Patriot Act
is to help create the climate of fear and intimidation in
the U.S. that will make the public reluctant to become involved
in events like we see this weekend here in Toronto? Is the
message to the public, stay away, don't get involved, keep
your nose to the grind stone?
My congratulations
to the organizers of this historic event. And my high regards
to those citizen activists who have come in search of the
truth. Don't let anyone tell you that you are joining the
"conspiracy theorists." The only conspiracy is deception
and silence. The only conspiracy is one that creates the
lack of courage to participate in real democracy.
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