State of
Emergency
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State of
Emergency: The US in the Final Six Months of the
George W. Bush Administration
By Lewis
Seiler and Dan Hamburg
In short, we are living in an
on-going state of emergency whose exact limits are unknown, on the basis of a
controversial deep event - 9/11 - that is still largely a mystery.
- UC
Professor Emeritus Peter Dale Scott.
Unhindered by a neutered Congress
and a compliant Court, President Bush has six months remaining to pursue his
agenda of expanding the war in the Middle East
and ensuring the continuation of the Global War on Terror (GWOT) beyond his
tenure in office.
The current administration has taken
unto itself unprecedented, nearly hegemonic powers since the events of 9/11. On
that day, George W. Bush issued his "Declaration of Emergency by Reason of
Certain Terrorist Attacks" under the authority of the National Emergencies
Act. This declaration, which can be rescinded by joint resolution of Congress,
has instead been extended six times. In 2007, the declaration was strengthened
with the issuance of National Security Presidential Directive 51 (NSPD-51)
which gave the president the authority to do whatever he deems necessary in a
vaguely defined "catastrophic emergency" including everything from
canceling elections to suspending the Constitution to launching a nuclear
attack.
Despite time constraints, there are
clear signs that the president, the vice-president and their neocon
collaborators are not finished. The constant saber-rattling toward Iran, with strong support from Israel, should
send a chill down the spine of any peace-loving American. Military chiefs who
oppose the president are "retired," as observed most recently with
the March dismissals of CENTCOM commander Admiral William Fallon and 6th Fleet
commander Vice-Admiral John Stufflebeem. Public opinion counts for nothing. In
a March 24 interview with ABC's Martha Raddatz, Vice President Dick Cheney
responded to a question about the war weariness of Americans with a languid
"So?"
According to J. Scott Carpenter,
former deputy assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern Affairs, Cheney
pushed hard for airstrikes against Iranian Revolutionary Guard bases last
summer. He was deterred by Pentagon officials who insisted that retaliation
might be difficult to contain. Now, with Cheney ally General David Petraeus
poised to take over Fallon's command, a significant obstacle has been re moved.
It seems clear that there is a
deadly struggle going on within the US government, a struggle that
could well determine not only the election of the next president, but the
survival of the republic. On one side are the neocons, the fanatics who led us
into Iraq
and who believe they alone possess the strategic acumen to usher in a "new
American century." On the other is the Republican Party old guard
ostensibly led by Defense Secretary Robert Gates. Gates was brought into the
administration at the end of 2006 to replace the disgraced and despised Donald
Rumsfeld, and generally to ride herd over the neocons.
The conflict between these factions
has broken into the open over the past eight months. The first public signal
came in October of last year, when the sixteen US
intelligence agencies issued a consensus National Intelligence Estimate (NIE)
that cut the legs out from under the administration's argument that Iran was on the
verge of developing a nuclear weapon. The NIE stated that the Iranians had
stopped work on the project in 2003.
Just before Labor Day last year, a
B-52 Stratofortress bomber carrying six cruise missiles armed with nuclear
warheads flew an unauthorized mission from Minot AFB in North
Dakota to Barksdale AFB in Louisiana.
Due to anonymous, high-level tips to the Military Times, the warheads were
recovered. After several seemingly inconclusive investigations of the incident,
Pentagon chief Gates fired Air Force Chief of Staff Michael Moseley and Air
Force Secretary Michael Wynne last week, without revealing the role either man
played in the nuke heist. Given the volume of evidence that this unprecedented
transfer of live nuclear weapons was not an accident, the question remains:
what individual or individuals within the government have the authority to
commandeer nuclear bombs?
Conservative pundit Patrick J.
Buchanan recently suggested that the neocons might be tempted to go to war with
Iran
in order to improve John McCain's chances of winning the presidency. As
audacious as that seems, we want to go one step further. We believe that this
administration is so zealous, so determined to hold onto power, that they may
well stage a "false flag" attack, creating just the kind of
"catastrophic emergency" to which NSPD-51 refers.
On April 29 of this year, CIA
veteran Roland V. Carnaby was shot dead by police officers after a high speed
chase through the streets of Houston.
Carnaby, who had been the CIA's Chief of Station for the Southeast Region
headquartered in Houston, was involved in
conducting security surveys of the Port
of Houston and had
discovered that the Department of Homeland Security was tolerating gaping holes
in port security. Carnaby and Houston
intelligence and law enforcement personnel were also investigating the presence
of "Middle Easterners" who were conducting surveillance of the Port of Houston. The "Middle Eastern"
designator is the term used by the FBI for Israelis (typically Mossad agents)
in order to avoid "political" problems with superiors.
Former National Security Agency
analyst and naval intelligence officer Wayne Madsen has been in Houston investigating the
Carnaby case at great personal risk. Madsen believes Carnaby was involved both
in heading off a potential war with Iran (by leaking Mossad plans to
assassinate Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah just days before Carnaby himself
was killed) and in trying to forestall a potential terrorist attack on the
port.
According to Madsen, "federal
agents in Houston
fear that 'another 9/11-type part false flag' attack is imminent, perhaps as
early as July 4." Such an attack along the twenty-five-mile Houston Ship
Channel, site of more explosive materials, toxic gases, and deadly
petrochemicals than anywhere else in the country, could create an environmental
and economic catastrophe that would dwarf 9/11.
How will the struggle within this
administration be brought to an end? Will courageous military men like Adm.
Fallon speak out before the next national tragedy befalls us? Will Congress act
decisively to remove the president's emergency powers, challenge NSPD-51, and
defend the Constitution? Will Defense Secretary Gates hold the line?
With just a half year left in what
many believe has been the worst presidency in American history the
possibilities are many, and some of them are truly frightening. As citizens of
this country, we must do everything in our power to ensure that there is no
expansion of war in the Middle East, no "false flag" attack at the Port of Houston or anywhere else, and a peaceful
and constitutional succession to a new administration.
Lewis
Seiler is president of Voice of the Environment, Inc. Dan Hamburg,
a former US
representative, is executive director.