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THE PENTAGON TELLS THE TRUTH ?? HOW SHOCKING!

Posted: December 5th, 2004, 11:50 am
by Zlatko Waterman
US admits the war for ‘hearts and minds’ in Iraq is now lost




Pentagon report reveals catalogue of failure
By Neil Mackay, Investigations Editor (Herald Tribune)



THE Pentagon has admitted that the war on terror and the invasion and occupation of Iraq have increased support for al-Qaeda, made ordinary Muslims hate the US and caused a global backlash against America because of the “self-serving hypocrisy” of George W Bush’s administration over the Middle East.
The mea culpa is contained in a shockingly frank “strategic communications” report, written this autumn by the Defence Science Board for Pentagon supremo Donald Rumsfeld.

On “the war of ideas or the struggle for hearts and minds”, the report says, “American efforts have not only failed, they may also have achieved the opposite of what they intended”.

“American direct intervention in the Muslim world has paradoxically elevated the stature of, and support for, radical Islamists, while diminishing support for the United States to single digits in some Arab societies.”

Referring to the repeated mantra from the White House that those who oppose the US in the Middle East “hate our freedoms”, the report says: “Muslims do not ‘hate our freedoms’, but rather, they hate our policies. The overwhelming majority voice their objections to what they see as one-sided support in favour of Israel and against Palestinian rights, and the long-standing, even increasing support, for what Muslims collectively see as tyrannies, most notably Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Pakistan and the Gulf states.

“Thus when American public diplomacy talks about bringing democracy to Islamic societies, this is seen as no more than self-serving hypo crisy. Moreover, saying that ‘freedom is the future of the Middle East’ is seen as patronising … in the eyes of Muslims, the American occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq has not led to democracy there, but only more chaos and suffering. US actions appear in contrast to be motivated by ulterior motives, and deliberately controlled in order to best serve American national interests at the expense of truly Muslim self-determination.”

The way America has handled itself since September 11 has played straight into the hands of al-Qaeda, the report adds. “American actions have elevated the authority of the jihadi insurgents and tended to ratify their legitimacy among Muslims.” The result is that al-Qaeda has gone from being a marginal movement to having support across the entire Muslim world.

“Muslims see Americans as strangely narcissistic,” the report goes on, adding that to the Arab world the war is “no more than an extension of American domestic politics”. The US has zero credibility among Muslims which means that “whatever Americans do and say only serves … the enemy”.

The report says that the US is now engaged in a “global and generational struggle of ideas” which it is rapidly losing. In order to reverse the trend, the US must make “strategic communication” – which includes the dissemination of propaganda and the running of military psychological operations – an integral part of national security. The document says that “Presidential leadership” is needed in this “ideas war” and warns against “arrogance, opportunism and double standards”.

“We face a war on terrorism,” the report says, “intensified conflict with Islam, and insurgency in Iraq. Worldwide anger and discontent are directed at America’s tarnished credibility and ways the US pursues its goals. There is a consensus that America’s power to persuade is in a state of crisis.” More than 90% of the populations of some Muslims countries, such as Saudi Arabia, are opposed to US policies.

“The war has increased mistrust of America in Europe,” the report adds, “weakened support for the war on terrorism and undermined US credibility worldwide.” This, in turn, poses an increased threat to US national security.

America’s “image problem”, the report authors suggest, is “linked to perceptions of the US as arrogant, hypocritical and self-indulgent”. The White House “has paid little attention” to the problems.

The report calls for a huge boost in spending on propaganda efforts as war policies “will not succeed unless they are communicated to global domestic audiences in ways that are credible”.

American rhetoric which equates the war on terror as a cold-war-style battle against “totalitarian evil” is also slapped down by the report. Muslims see what is happening as a “history-shaking movement of Islamic restoration … a renewal of the Muslim world …(which) has taken form through many variant movements, both moderate and militant, with many millions of adherents – of which radical fighters are only a small part”.

Rather than supporting tyranny, most Muslim want to overthrow tyrannical regimes like Saudi Arabia. “The US finds itself in the strategically awkward – and potentially dangerous – situation of being the long-standing prop and alliance partner of these authoritarian regimes. Without the US, these regimes could not survive,” the report says.

“Thus the US has strongly taken sides in a desperate struggle … US policies and actions are increasingly seen by the overwhelming majority of Muslims as a threat to the survival of Islam itself … Americans have inserted themselves into this intra-Islamic struggle in ways that have made us an enemy to most Muslims.

“There is no yearning-to- be-liberated-by-the-US groundswell among Muslim societies … The perception of intimate US support of tyr-annies in the Muslim world is perhaps the critical vulnerability in American strategy. It strongly undercuts our message, while strongly promoting that of the enemy.”

The report says that, in terms of the “information war”, “at this moment it is the enemy that has the advantage”. The US propaganda drive has to focus on “separating the vast majority of non-violent Muslims from the radical- militant Islamist-Jihadist”.

According to the report, “the official take on the target audience [the Muslim world] has been gloriously simple” and divided the Middle East into “good” and “bad Muslims”.

“Americans are convinced that the US is a benevolent ‘superpower’ that elevates values emphasising freedom … deep down we assume that everyone should naturally support our policies. Yet the world of Islam – by overwhelming majorities at this time – sees things differently. Muslims see American policies as inimical to their values, American rhetoric about freedom and democracy as hypocritical and American actions as deeply threatening.

“In two years the jihadi message – that strongly attacks American values – is being accepted by more moderate and non-violent Muslims. This in turn implies that negative opinion of the US has not yet bottomed out

Equally important, the report says, is “to renew European attitudes towards America” which have also been severely damaged since September 11, 2001. As “al-Qaeda constantly outflanks the US in the war of information”, American has to adopt more sophisticated propaganda techniques, such as targeting secularists in the Muslim world – including writers, artists and singers – and getting US private sector media and marketing professionals involved in disseminating messages to Muslims with a pro-US “brand”.

The Pentagon report also calls for the establishment of a national security adviser for strategic communications, and a massive boost in funding for the “information war” to boost US government TV and radio stations broadcasting in the Middle East.

The importance of the need to quickly establish a propaganda advantage is underscored by a document attached to the Pentagon report from Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy defence secretary, dated May.

It says: “Our military expeditions to Afghanistan and Iraq are unlikely to be the last such excursion in the global war on terrorism.”

05 December 2004

Posted: December 5th, 2004, 12:48 pm
by judih
funny how long it's taken for the administration to say what's been so patently clear.

but good that's it's been said.
thanks, zlatko for posting this

judih

Posted: December 5th, 2004, 4:21 pm
by knip
this is not necessarily the administration's opinion...it could merely be an opinion piece by a policy wonk

Posted: December 5th, 2004, 8:17 pm
by Zlatko Waterman
Absolutely, knip. Who knows how many wonks are wonking these days, eh?


Thanks for your comment.


--Z

Posted: December 5th, 2004, 8:59 pm
by perezoso
Funny-- Padre Chacal with some nice words for Capn' Knip, who has stated his support for the war, Bush and GOP numerous times

Posted: December 5th, 2004, 9:53 pm
by jimboloco
I got that report via the vets for peace also saved it from the Christian Science Moniter....but wonder does it make any difference? I mean, the heavies are gonna try and win their game anyway and the good citizens of America continue to follow with unwavering faith in their God-fearing president.

Sixty minutes with 50 year old folks being re-called. Thank goodness I resigned my commission back in 1972.
People will go and conform.

A policy wonk is probably right, because it will not impact on a change of course. They are all about manipulating the world to their perspective instead of being "sensitive" (the Gawd-awful emasculated utterance of Kerry's downfall, his Dean scream, before he ended his campaign sounding like he was ready to take over as commander).....It would be fortuitious if indeed there was a widespread awareness that reflected the above statement....-

Onward Christian soldiers. I mean the conclusion is that sensitivity needs only to inform on how to repropagandize, both the American people (easily duped) and the emerging world opinion ( hopefully not so easily duped.)

We are right anyhow, it is just a matter of getting them to believe it. My hope is that somehow there will be an emerging foreign opposition to America's policies and that they at least will wake up to our self-serving hypocrisy, even if the American people do no. As M. Moore said, man Americans are stupid.

Posted: December 5th, 2004, 10:46 pm
by knip
Capn' Knip, who has stated his support for the war, Bush and GOP numerous times

to be clear, what i have said is that although i disapproved of the timing of the iraq attack, i didn't disagree with the attack itself...yes, i would have preferred diplomacy and inspections be given more time, i believed and still believe that an attack was necessary, although with the benefit of hindsight, the reasons for attacking might be different

i don't recall ever calling myself a bush supporter, at least in the context that term is normally used...what i have said is that i believe bush was the lesser of two evils (between bush and kerry), although i always acknowledged this was by a slim margin, and the possibility existed for me to flop back...in fact, i was rooting for kerry until about a month before the election, when i flopped to bush, primarily because kerry lost me...i really wanted to be able to stand behind him, but he blew it (at least for me, he did)...but being 50.1% for bush and 49.9% for kerry hardly constitutes being a bush supporter in the context of what folks think of when the phrase is used

as for supporting the GOP, i don't even know what GOP means, so i can't really comment on that, other than to say i think it has something to do with the right in the US

for the record, in the last canadian federal election i voted green party so they could reach official party status and be eligible for funding, allowing them to get the green agenda into the public discourse...all the while i wanted the liberals to win...it worked - the greens attained official status for the first time in its existence, and the liberals formed a minority government


the nice thing about the internet is that we can share ideas and perceptions...the bad thing about it is people can post anything they like, whether supported by fact or not

Posted: December 7th, 2004, 8:44 am
by jimboloco
I can understand you losing Kerry. He was a dissappointment. But supporting Bush as a de-facto, wow. He is a disaster.
I think your complexity is as yet unfolding. Besides, you had the advantage of not having to vote, just to ponder it.
I am dissappointed that Kerry "lost" also that he waffled so much.

He sounded like a little Mussolini at the end.
The Iraq War, on the other hand is a disaster unfolding.
Referring back to Zlatco's post, the Pentagon is really in a bargaining phase right now, as the greif proceeds.

we had a Canaiian flight instructor on liason in our USAF pilot training class (one block away from whene Stilltrucking now lives)
and he was always saying, "Now don't forget the undercarriage!"
He meant the landing gear, I think.
It would be possible to request a transfer as Canadian liason to the Royal forces now in Iraq.


Image

Posted: December 7th, 2004, 10:29 am
by Doreen Peri
eeeewwwwww

who is the lady who's shot in the head?

YIKES!!!!

What's that for? shock value or something?

i don't get it.

The war is shocking enough!

Great cartoon, though. Haunting.

This whole situation makes me ill.

But that image of the lady with a bullet in her head is going to give me nightmares!

Posted: December 7th, 2004, 11:13 am
by jimboloco
So i deleted it. You should have the option of going to the link with a warning, will do that in the future.

Subject: Buddhist Conscientious Objector, Abu Ghraib Prison Witness,
Iraqi Veteran SPEAKING in Sarasota

Aidan Delgado, Buddhist Conscientious Objector,
Abu Ghraib Prison Witness, Iraqi Veteran
Speaking in Sarasota
@ New College, 7 PM, Monday.

http://www.ncf.edu/PublicAffairs/Documents/delgado.htm

Posted: December 7th, 2004, 2:23 pm
by knip
But supporting Bush as a de-facto, wow. He is a disaster.

...not quite what i said, is it?

Posted: December 7th, 2004, 5:25 pm
by hester_prynne
This war sucks.
President Bush sucks.

I have no links to post, no history to quote, nothing more to say really.

I'm sick of it, sick of us, just letting it happen, sick of not knowing what to do, sick of the anger and hate I feel.

I go to sleep nervous, and wake up exhausted and angry.

I am against everything this country is doing right now.

I am amazed that we sit, and watch, and exclaim, and quote, and post pictures, while it continues.

If only there were something we could do in huge numbers. Like maybe hang surrender flags from our homes until Bush is removed and our soldiers come home. Then, and only then, we could put our American flags back out again........

Anything, something. I'm so tired of all the opinions and rantings.

It's becoming too hard, even for this hard bitten old sister, to bear........

H :cry:

Posted: December 7th, 2004, 7:23 pm
by Dave The Dov
Let's all hang our flags upside down and show how we really feel about the sitution.

Image
_________________
howtorollajoint

Posted: December 7th, 2004, 8:46 pm
by jimboloco
The sense of frustration is real. At the same time we have to carry on with our daily lives. I heard on free speech radio tonight that one Iraqi woman had lost her husband and oldest son and they were reduced to living on handouts. A lot of suffering is going on right now. There will be mass demonstrations in DC at Bush's inaugeration also many local ones. One very good thing to do is to find a local wherever you are peace vigil for that day in January and attend.
But beware of frustrating emotions. I have been living with them for years, lost many rears to despair, immense emotional suffering and re emerged. I have to survive and carry on because I believe that I am a part of something emerging that is good.
I work with a number of folks. It is interesting that all the former veterans are anti-war. Maybe because thay are nurses. But there are also some Bush supporters, and I have to continue working with them, finding value in them and also ways to communicate with them, leaving meanings open and unanswered at times so they have to ponder.
Which is why I meditate. How can sitting save this angry world?
By the way, I like those folks I work with who voted for Bush. I also see around them and know that they are disconnected from what we as a nation are doing.
Meditate, pray, create, read, be a spiritual being and ""hope til hope creates from its own wreck the thing it contemplates."
Art and Alienation, Herbert Read.
I am sorry that I posted that photo.
I have seen suffering and beared enormous pain in the past.
It has got to be a fighting spirit that refuses to give into despair, that conscientiously challenges the negativity, the thought-feelings that condemn and suffocate.
I am forthwith dedicating myself to that sacred vitality, energy, spirit. There ain't one person I;ve been introduced to in this community that I withhold fondness and affections for.'
I like you all alot.

Posted: December 7th, 2004, 9:33 pm
by hester_prynne
Thank you Jimbo, for your understanding. I really feel it, and it feels good.
Some days are better than others, somedays I've more fight in me, days like today, I have little.
I just love what you quoted about "hope til hope creates from it's own wreck"
It made the ol beam of light in me start up a little again.
I need that. It's waning depresses me so much.
Thank you
Hest 8)