
Karen Kwiatkowski - United States

Pentagon Whistle-Blower Karen
Kwiatkowski
Pentagon Whistle-Blower on the
Coming War With Iran
an interview with Lt. Col. Karen
Kwiatkowski (ret.)
www.truthdig.com, Feb 27, 2007
Lt. Col. Karen Kwiatkowski (ret.)
is a veteran of the Pentagon with firsthand experience of the
administration's cherry-picking of intelligence, reveals why Bush
thinks he can win a war with Iran, why few politicians are serious
about withdrawal and why "when they call Iraq a success,
they mean it."
JAMES HARRIS: This is Truthdig. James
Harris sitting down with Josh Scheer, and on the phone we have
a special guest. She is a retired Air Force Lieutenant Colonel,
formerly working for the Pentagon, The National Security Agency.
Needless to say, she knows a lot about intel and a lot about what
took place and what went on before we went into Iraq and what
went on with that intel. Many questions have been asked in recent
weeks, obviously in recent years about what we knew, what was
fabricated, what was made up. On the phone we have somebody who
has been vociferous in her effort to out the wrongdoings of people
like Douglas Feith and people like Donald Rumsfeld. So, Karen
Kwiatkowski, welcome to Truthdig.
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: Thanks for having me.
JAMES HARRIS: It's our pleasure. I want
to start, not talking about Douglas Feith, but I want to get your
opinion about Iraq. We know that British troops and Tony Blair
have decided that they're out. We've seen the commitment of other
nations drop by 17 countries and our biggest partner, England,
is now out. Why do you think they're out and Bush is still in?
Well we know why Bush is still in. Why now?
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: It is towards the end
of Tony Blair's long, long term of duty there as the Prime Minister.
And the other thing is, the British very much oppose, in spite
of the fact that there are some Rupert Murdoch newspapers in Great
Britain, some conservative papers, pseudo conservative I should
say, not truly conservative. Truly conservatives, true conservatives
have opposed this adventure from the beginning. But in spite of
the small, loud pro-war faction in London, most people in Britain
recognize this for what it is. They have some experience in this
kind of thing with, both in Middle East, particularly in Iraq
years ago when they left in dishonor. Another time when they tried
to occupy Baghdad, years and years ago, and also their experience
with terrorism and movements of independents or what have you
with Ireland, much more recent memory for many of the people in
Great Britain. I don't think Britain's economy can afford it.
Certainly they see the writing on the all, why get, why not get
out now while George Bush is still there than be stuck with, stuck
holding the bag when a Democratic president takes over and pulls
the troops out abruptly in 2008, 2009. So I think there's many
reasons why they're doing it. Some people say it is, it is because
of Tony Blair's concern over his legacy. If he doesn't bring the
troops home, his legacy will be that he left Britain in a quagmire.
They are in a quagmire now and maybe he doesn't want to leave
office with that being on his record, a lot of reasons. Mainly
it's the right thing to do, the people of Britain want those troops
home. And I guess their government is listening. Unlike ours.
JAMES HARRIS: The highly speculative people
have said they're out because we're going into Iran. You might've
read the news
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: Well yeah, I don't
I had not seen that connection made, but I certainly am alarmed
at the daily signs that indeed this country is getting ready to
instigate an attack on Iran. All the signs are there, the suggestions
that Iranian bombs are killing American soldiers, that's not true,
but it's certainly been made in, I think every American newspaper,
the suggestion that Iran is somehow killing Americans. The suggestion
that Iran has nuclear weapons, is imminently close to nuclear
weapons. That is not true but that's been, those claims are made,
even by this Administration. The idea that we have two carrier
battle groups currently in the region and in fact I just saw today,
Admiral Walsh, one of the big guys in the Navy said that we're
very concerned about what Iran is doing even more so than Al Qaeda.
So there, all the signs are there that we are being, we're going
to wake up one morning soon, very soon, and we will be at war
with Iran. We will have bombed them in some sort of shock and
awe campaign destroying many lives and setting back US relations
even further than we've already done it with Iraq.
JOSH SCHEER: I want to continue on Iran.
You spent obviously many years in the military and you talk in
those kind of terms that many people maybe not know about. Can
we not just politically, and not just in the region, but can we
support another war in another country? Right now we're in Afghanistan,
we're in Iraq. Can we feasibly actually go into Iran, or is this
going to be a shock and awe campaign?
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: You know, I think the,
one of the big reasons that Bush and Cheney think they can do
Iran is that they believe, well, they're hearing from the Air
Force and the Navy, two of the three main branches of our military,
the two that have been left out of the glory of Iraq, you see.
And those guys want a piece of the action, and so they're advertising
to the Administration and publicly, I mean you can read it for
yourself, the Air Force and the Navy have targets they believe
they can overwhelmingly hit their targets, deep penetration, possibly
nuclear weapons, I mean, nothing is off the table as Dick Cheney
says "nothing is off the table." And the delivery of
these weapons, whether they're conventional or nuclear will be
naval and Air Force. They'll be Navy from the sea and Air Force
form long range bombers and some of the bases that we have around
the so I don't think, certainly, I don't know, I'm not in the
Army, wasn't in the Army, I was in the Air Force, I don't think
the Army could support any type of invasion of Iran and they wouldn't'
want to. I'm sure that they've, they've had enough with Iraq and
our reserves are in terrible condition. We've got huge problems
in the Army and in the Reserve system. So I don't think there's
any intention to go into Iran, but simply to destroy it and to
create havoc and disruption and humanitarian crisis and topple
perhaps the government of Ahmadinejad. We want to topple that
government. Yeah, we'll do it with bombs from a distance. I don't
know if you call that shock and awe, we've been advertising it
for a long, long time. It will not be a surprise to the Iranians
if we do it.
JAMES HARRIS: That was your former boss,
the shock and awe campaign. I'm still shocked and I'm awed.
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: [laughs] He shocked
and awed all of us.
JAMES HARRIS: As a means of understanding
the level of deceit that you claim took place and I agree took
place before the war. Because it, the things that are going on
in and around Iran sound a lot like the things that went on in
2002
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: Sure do.
JAMES HARRIS: And I always note Scott
Ritter, because I spoke to him, and I couldn't believe that we
didn't take the advice of people like him that were saying that
there's nothing there, there's nothing. Can you describe for us
a typical day, if we went in around March, we're approaching that
anniversary, we went in around March of '03. What was it like
in The Pentagon?
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: Well, I worked in the
Office of the Secretary of Defense and up until mid February I
was in Near East South Asia, which is the office that owns the
Office of Special Plans, they were our sister office. And so Iraq
is one of the areas. And there's a great degree of excitement,
there's a, we didn't know when we would invade Iraq, and many
people thought it would be in February, late February, early March
and it actually was like I think march 23 is when we actually
conducted that attack on Baghdad and that kind of thing. Most
people in the Pentagon, there's 23,000 people work in the Pentagon.
Most of those people were as in the dark as any of the Americans.
They believed what they read in the papers, and what they read
in the papers, particularly The New York Times and The Washington
Post had been, for the most part, planted by The Administration.
We know this now, the whole Congress knows this now, they've had
a number of hearings publicly faltered, I think even the DODIG
[Department of Defense Inspector General] just recently faltered,
Doug Feith and his whole organization for planting and providing
misleading stories, many of which were later leaked on purpose
to the press. A friendly press, of course, Judith Miller was not
hostile to the intentions of this administration. They wanted
to go into Iraq, and they intended to go into Iraq. We did go
into Iraq, and all that was really needed was to bring onboard
the American people, and to bring onboard the Congress. But not
necessarily to declare war. Congress has never been asked to declare
war on Iraq. And they won't be asked to declare war on Iran even
though we will conduct that war. These guys had an agenda. In
fact, one of the things that I did learn as a result of having
my eyes opened in that final tour in the Pentagon is that neo-conservatives,
their foreign policy is very activist, you could say that's a
nice way to say it, very activist, it's very oriented towards
the Untied States as a benevolent dictator, a benevolent guiding
hand for the world, particularly the Middle East. And it's very
much a pro-Israel policy, and it's a policy that says, we should
be able to do whatever we want to do, if we see it in our interest.
Now, Americans don't see any value, most Americans, 75 percent
of Americans want the troops home now. They don't see any value
to having our troops in Iraq. They didn't see any value in that
in 2002. But, they had a story sold to them, which was of course
that Saddam Hussein somehow was involved with 9/11, had WMDs,
and was a serious threat, an imminent threat, a grave threat to
the United States.
JAMES HARRIS: For those people that think
somehow that government officials, even though you work for the
government, were complicit in this effort to move into Iraq. I
want you to be clear, as a worker there, you were doing what you
thought was right at the time. Is that a safe thing to say?
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: We were doing, I'll
tell ya, there's two parts of how the story is sold, how the propaganda
was put forth on the American people, and how it's been put forth
on them today in terms of Iran. You have political appointees
in every government agency, and they switch out every time you
get a new president, and that's totally normal. Usually those,
the numbers increase after every president, they always get a
few more. So Bush was no different. He brought in a number of
political appointees: Doug Feith, certainly Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz.
But also a number of political appointees at what you would call
a lower level, like my level - Lieutenant Colonel and Colonel
level. And they're not military officers, they're civilians. And
they're brought in, and this is where the propaganda was kind
of put together, this is where the so-called alternative intelligence
assessments were put together by the civilian appointees of the
Bush Administration. Most of which, in fact, probably all of the
Pentagon shared a neo-conservative world vision, which has a particular
role for us, and that included the topping of Saddam Hussein,
and it includes the toppling of the leadership in Tehran. These
guys are the ones doing it, they're doing it. They're putting
all the propaganda, they're spreading stories, planting stuff
in the media. They're doing that to people in The Pentagon, the
Civil Service core in The Pentagon, which is about half of them,
and the other half which are uniformed military officers serving
anywhere from three to four, five years, sometimes tours in The
Pentagon. We're looking at regular intel, we're looking at the
stuff the CIA and the DIA, Defense Intelligence Agency produces.
And that stuff never said, that stuff never said Saddam Hussein
had WMDs, had a delivery system, was a threat to the United States.
It never said that Saddam Hussein had anything to do with 9/11
or that Saddam Hussein worked with Al Qaeda. That intelligence
never said that.
JAMES HARRIS: Did they tell you to shut
up?
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: Absolutely! [Laughs]
That's a funny thing, and of course, here's how it worked. Once
the Office of Special Plans was set up formally, now they were
informally set up prior to the fall of 2002, but formally they
became an office with office space and that whole bit. And the
first act to follow that setup of the Office of Special Plans,
we had a staff meeting, and our boss, Bill Ludy, who was the boss
of Special Plans technically, not in reality but on paper. And
he announced to us that from now on, action officers, staff officers
such as myself and all my peers, at least in that office, and
I presume this went all the way through the rest of policy, but
we were told that when we needed to fill in data, putting it in
papers that we would send up, doing our job, as we did our daily
job, we were no longer to look at CIA and DIA intelligence, we
were simply to call the Office of Special Plans and they would
send down to us talking points, which we would incorporate verbatim
no deletions, no additions, no modifications into every paper
that we did. And of course, that was very unusual and all the
action officers are looking at each other like, well that's interesting.
We're not to look at the intelligence any more, we're simply to
go to this group of political appointees and they will provide
to us word for word what we should say about Iraq, about WMD and
about terrorism. And this is exactly what our orders were. And
there were people [Laughs] a couple of people, and I have to say,
I was not one of these people who said, "you know, I'm not
gonna do that, I'm not gonna do that because there's something
I don't like about it, it's incorrect in some way." And they
experimented with sending up papers that did not follow those
instructions, and those papers were 100 percent of the time returned
back for correction. So we weren't allowed to put out anything
except what Office of Special Plans was producing for us. And
that was only partially based on intelligence, and partially based
on a political agenda. So this is how they did it. And I'll tell
you what, civil servants and military people, we follow orders,
okay. And we buy into it. And we don't suspect that our leaders
are nefarious, we don't suspect that. They, they quite frankly
have to go a long way to prove to us that they are nefarious.
That's how it worked, and I imagine it's working much the same
way there in terms of Iran.
JOSH SCHEER: Obviously you've been in
the military for quite a while. Has this every happened to your
knowledge in any other [administration's] Pentagon, where political
appointees have the power to just control the
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: Sure, well sure, Vietnam
is filled with examples. And Daniel Ellsberg's information and
his Pentagon paper that he released factual information that contradicted
what political appointees at the top of the Pentagon were saying
to Congress and saying to the American people. Yeah, this is typical
of how it works. Now, having said that, most people who serve
and wear the uniform or give a career of service to the military,
whether civilian, civil service or military, we don't think that
our bosses will do that. We don't think that our military will
do that. But in fact history is full of examples of bald-faced
lies being told to sell particular agendas. Often times those
agendas include war making, certainly in Vietnam they did, under
LBJ and a few other presidents. Look at the thing that Reagan
did. I mean, I actually don't dislike Reagan, he deployed very
few troops overseas, but when he went in to that little island
down there what is the name of that island that he invaded, Grenada.
[Laughs] Remember that? Remember the Invasion of Grenada.
JOSH SCHEER: All eight hours?
JAMES HARRIS: It was a short one.
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: I mean, God, shortly
thereafter, come to find out, well actually, some of the stuff
they said about the threat and the Cubans and all that wasn't
really true. So politicians and their politically appointed military
leaders will lie, historically do lie when it has to do with making
war, particularly making a war that they want. And what has happened
in the Bush Administration is the war that they want was Iraq.
And the war that they want is Iran, and the war that they want
is Syria, okay? That's the war they want. They don't want Vietnam.
I don't know why, they don't want Vietnam, they want these places,
this is what the neo-conservatives are particularly interested
in. So we have war. And they make up stories and we're seeing
the exact same thing in terms of Iran, which is quite alarming
because it seems as if we can't stop this, we can't prevent this.
JOSH SCHEER: You were talking about these
political appointees and pushing us into war. Why haven't people
like Paul Wolfowitz, I mean these guys seem to feather their own
nests.
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: [Laughs] That's an
understatement.
JOSH SCHEER: They lead us into war, Mark
Zell, Doug Feith's partner was in bed with Chalabi. It falls apart
and then it seems that these guys disappear into the woodwork.
What happens?
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: Well, a big part of
what happens is these guys have top cover, the names of the top
cover are Dick Cheney and George W. Bush. These guys like what
Wolfowitz has done. And here's the other thing. While we as American
citizens do not like being lied to, particularly being lied to
into a stupid quagmire that makes no sense. We don't' like being
lied to. Congress doesn't like being lied to. However, many in
Congress, and certainly in this administration agree, and this
is Democrats and Republicans, like the idea that we have gone
into Iraq, we have built four mega bases, they are complete. Most
of the money we gave to Halliburton was for construction and completion
of these bases. We have probably, of the 150,000, 160,000 troops
we have in Iraq probably 110,000 of those folks are associated
with one of those four mega bases. Safely ensconced behind acres
and acres of concrete. To operate there indefinitely, no matter
what happens in Baghdad, no matter who takes over, no matter if
the country splits into three pieces or it stays one. No matter
what happens, we have those mega bases, and there's many in Congress
and certainly in this administration, Republican and Democrat
alike that really like that. Part of the reason I think that we
went into Iraq was to reestablish a stronger foothold than we
had in Saudi Arabia, but also a more economical, a more flexible,
in terms of who we want to hit. If you want to hit Syria, can
you do it from Iraq? Of course you can. And now you can do it
from bases that will support any type of airplane you want, any
number of troops in barracks. I mean we can do things from Iraq.
And this is what they wanted. So, yeah, we don't like being lied
to. But quite frankly, many people in the Congress, and certainly
this administration, when they call Iraq a success, they mean
it, and this is why.
We're in Iraq to stay. And can we strike
Iran from Iraq? Well, I don't know if we'll do that next week,
but we can.
JAMES HARRIS: We're there to stay in the
sense that even, let's say somebody takes office in 'o8, do you
think that we're gonna be occupying those bases still?
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: Absolutely! And we
don't even have status of forces agreements with any legitimate
government in Iraq to support those bases. They are illegal bases,
okay. But yes, they're gonna stay, absolutely, they're gonna stay.
And I'll tell you, there are guys that have been with this administration
for awhile, people, in fact one of the guys was an Air Force General
that was involved with the Kurds ten years ago, he's retired now,
but he was actually the guy, his name escapes me for the moment,
but he [Jay Garner] was [Paul] Bremer's predecessor for a short
period of time. And he was fired, and Bremer came in and took
over in Baghdad as part of the reconstruction phase. This is in
the Spring of 2003. And this guy gave an interview in Government
Exec Magazine, February 2004, he said "we will be in Iraq,
and the American people need to get with this program, we will
be in Iraq like we were in the Philippines for anywhere from 20
to 30 more years. That's the time frame that we're looking at.
And that is the life span of the bases that we've constructed
there. Yeah, we are not leaving these bases, and a Democratic
president, I don't care who they are, will keep those bases there.
They will justify them and they will use them and we love that.
We love it. So it's not about what the American people think is
right or wrong, it's not about if we got lied to, what matters
is, they did what they wanted to do, and as Bush says, and as
Cheney says, "it's quite the success." And this is very
frightening. Because none of this has ever been admitted to the
American people, it's only been hinted at by people that know.
And of course the facts speak for themselves. The facts are, we
are in Iraq, we have the finest military installations in the
world, the newest military installations in the world, and we're
not leaving them. We're not turning them over to a Shiite government,
we're not turning them over to a Sunni government, we're not turning
them over to a Kurdish government. We're not doing that. They
are American bases. We've got our flag there. And this is kind
of the way they used to do things, I guess back in the Middle
Ages. Maybe the Dark Ages. A king decided he wanted to go do something,
he went and did it. And this is George Bush. We call him an elected
president. I mean, he's operating much as kings have operated
in the past.
JAMES HARRIS: You called him "the
war pimp" in your essay. "He's behaving," as you
put it, "a lot like a pimp would treat a prostitute, 'you
do like I tell you to do.'"
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: That's right, and over
the money. "Get back to work." We're using these, we
use these bases, we use these people, the country, it matters
not one whit to us.
JOSH SCHEER: With all we see in the news
on a daily basis, is there any reason to hope? Every day I lose
more and more sleep, about soldiers who are dying. You're talking
about being there another 30 years. How many more soldiers are
going to be injured and killed? How much more money is this war
going to cost?
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: Well the money, yeah,
sure, the money's a problem. The number of soldiers being killed
will probably actually reduce in many ways because we will withdraw
to our bases and we will not interface with Iraqis who hate us.
This idea of what they're doing right now, this so called three-block
program, let's meet more Iraqis so they'll like us, that's totally
for show. The more Iraqis meet us, the more they hate us. So I
actually do think though, over time, fewer Americans will die,
and look how easily, look how easily this country has accepted
the loss of those 3,200 soldiers that have died. I think something
like 90 women, maybe more have died, mothers of children. They've
died, and America has eaten it up, we have not complained one
bit. They're spread out over 50 states, hey, it's no big deal.
So I think we can certainly, as a country, accommodate future
deaths and I think the death rate will drop. The problem is, it's
immoral, it's illegal, it engenders hatred for Americans, contempt
for Americans. It makes every American in the world a target for
terrorism. It's just plain wrong, it's unconstitutional. I mean,
there's a lot of problems with it. Dead Americans, unfortunately
doesn't seem to be the problem for most of us, which is a shame.
We don't like looking at ugly people, I will say that. And we're
seeing a lot of folks come back pretty deformed, mentally and
even more obviously physically, deformed from their experiences
in Iraq. And I think that could, that might give, I hate to say
give hope, but realize the real moral price that we're paying
for this, that that can help. But quite frankly, I have no hope
of us leaving Iraq. I think the intention was for us to put bases
there, to stay there, operate militarily from there. And I think
that's what we're going to do, Democrat, Republican, Independent,
I can't imagine anybody but Ron Paul, if you elect Ron Paul as
president, those bases will be closed down. Otherwise
JOSH SCHEER: Or Dennis Kucinich.
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: Or Kucinich, there
you go, Kucinich would do it too. So these are the guys we are
able to elect, but chances are, I hate to say, the machine is
not behind these men. So yeah, we got a problem. Now is there
anything optimistic? Yeah. I'm a God fearing Christian. God has
the power. How He might express that, I don't know. But yeah,
can the average American do anything about it? I'm just not, I'm
pretty not very, I'm not optimistic, I'm pessimistic that any
single American can do much to prevent what seems to be going
to happen here, attacking Iran and also this terrible thing we've
done to Iraq which I think will continue to go on for many years.
It will fester, fester for many years.
JAMES HARRIS: I'm one that believes the
price of terrorism, I'm interested to get your perspective on
this as one who watched us engage on this terrorist enemy, an
enemy like we'd never seen before, at least from a military standpoint.
I look at terrorism, and I see it tearing us apart. And in a lot
of ways I look at it and say, we've already lost this war because
we now have a president who's bending the Constitution. We're
looking over our shoulders. We question our whereabouts. This
whole thing that went on in Boston with the advertisement, "is
it a bomb?" There's always that question. Perhaps the goal
of Osama, perhaps the goal of these people was to make us afraid,
and they've succeeded at that. My question to you is, in your
mind, what is the true price of terrorism been for you?
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: The military has been
broken in most respects into the extent that it worked, it worked
because it's a mercenary force. We were so contracted out, we
hired people that are beyond the law, that are not accountable
to rules of war. And that's how we function. So the whole military
system, the idea of a defensive force, forget it, that's done
with. Constitution has been hurt by many presidents, but this
president has done huge damage to understanding of the Constitution,
its idea that it should restrain presidential power, that we should
be conservative, small "c" conservative when we go out
and engage in these adventures, the Congress has the right to
declare war, we've ignored that for many decades. Just continued
down that path. Te idea that the Bill of Rights is an option,
the Bill of Rights is a set of suggestions has become almost mainstream
belief. And this is terrible, this is a terrible thing. But I
don't think Osama Bin Laden did that. Terrorism is, obviously
it has a political intent, but terrorism almost always, in fact
I think in every case, when the political solutions are offered,
when the politics change, when the people themselves change, terrorism
stops. Terrorism to the extent that it is a crime, should've been
treated like a crime, but instead we made it a war. Well there
is no war with terror, terrorism is a tactic, you don't make war
against a tactic. So yeah, a lot of things have happened, I don't
think Osama had much to do with it, quite frankly, I think this
administration, many of the people in Washington are quite comfortable
with reduced freedoms for America and this is a good way to get
those reduced freedoms, to basically break down and deconstruct
the Bill of Rights and say, "well we didn't mean that, we
didn't mean this." It's a problem. Our country has changed,
and I think what people have to do now is kind of stand up and
separate themselves from a government to the extent that they
don't agree with it and prepare themselves for real battle. Because
we are gonna need to stand up very, I can use the word "vociferously,"
I think that's what we have to do, cause our own country is at
risk, but not from terror, not from buildings being knocked down,
that's not what our country is at risk from, it's at risk from
our politics, from our abandonment of the Constitution, our devaluing
of the Bill of Rights. We've lost our freedom. Osama probably
couldn't have dreamed that George Bush would help him out so much.
I don't think even that was his intention, I don't think Osama
could care less about our freedom, Osama's issues have to do with
Islam and the Holy land, Saudi Arabia, his issues are much more
narrow than anything that he's so called achieved. And I think
George Bush has achieved this in a very weak and LAUGHS debased
Congress has achieved this for this country. And so, it's a big
problem. I'm quite depressed about it. I don't really have a solution
or a remedy. I think we just need to wake up and see what's being
done, and then we need to decide if we want to be a part of it.
It's like that old thing, I'm not a child of the 60s, but you're
either working to fix the problem or you are the problem.
JOSH SCHEER: Now, Karen, I heard you make
a reference to [terrorism as a tactic] ...Chuck Hagel made reference
to terrorism as a tactic in a speech, and [how] it's not a country,
and you talk about Ron Paul. Why have the neo-cons been allowed
[to do this] , they're not, to me, they don't seem like the Republicans
that I grew up with.
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: No, no, they're not.
And if you look at the history of neo-conservatism, it really
traces its roots, well back to Trotsky, but if you go more recent,
back to who was the guy, Senator from Boeing (Henry Jackson) they
used to call him big Democratic, 30 year Senator out of Washington
State. And Richard Perle was on his staff, Wolfowitz I think was
inspired by him. And he was a Democrat during the Cold War. And
he was a pro, or I should say strongly anti-Communist democrat,
kind of a strong defense democrat. And these guys migrated, particularly
after Jimmy Carter, because Jimmy Carter, remember, what was he
doing, he was trying to make peace. Remember that, somebody got
a Peace Prize out of it, I don't know what it was, some kind of
approach between Arabs and Israelis, and Carter was part of that.
And that alienated a great many of these folks who now we know
as neo-conservatives because they have two things that they care
about, one is strong defense, for whatever reason they like that,
an activist foreign policy, and pro-Israel, no questions asked
policy. So many of these conservative, pro-defense democrats,
anti-Communist democrats abandoned the democratic party at the
time of Jimmy Carter, particularly after the time of Jimmy Carter
and his summit working on Middle East peace. And they came over
to eth Republican party, and of course they came over with a great
deal of money and a great deal of political influence and a great
deal of voters. So now they're in the Republican party, and absolutely,
this happened, late 1970s. so it is not, these are not the Republicans
that we grew up thinking about, but they are in the Republican
party now. Of course the Republican party now isn't anything like
what I thought it was, it's certainly no Goldwater party, it's
a party of big spending, it's a party of corruption. What do you
want me to say? They love big government, they haven't seen a
big government plan they didn't like.
JAMES HARRIS: Henry "Scoop"
Jackson was the guy you were looking for. As we continue to search
for the truth, and that's pretty much the motto of Truthdig, we
don't believe we have the answer, but we believe that we should
at least be looking for the answers. So as we approach that truth
around the issues that take place in Iraq and perhaps Iran, we
think you might be a good friend to have close to the Truthdig
family so we'd like to check in from time to time.
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: Sure, I'd be delighted,
it's great fun talking. And hopefully maybe in a couple of months
some of these negative things I think are going to happen, maybe
they won't happen.
JAMES HARRIS: Maybe we'll all be proven
wrong whatever the case
JOSH SCHEER: I'm praying for it.
JAMES HARRIS: We're both praying, even
though Josh is not a religious man.
JOSH SCHEER: Oh, excuse me, I am a religious
man.
KAREN KWIATKOWSKI: Maybe we're in a foxhole
together. You know what they say, there are no atheists in a foxhole,
and I think in political sense, many true conservatives and classical
liberals, people that love freedom, unlike George Bush, people
that really love freedom, we are in a foxhole. We are threatened.
And so we gotta call on every little bit of help we can possibly
get.
JOSH SCHEER: I believe in God, I don't
believe in big religion, just like I don't believe in big government.
JAMES HARRIS: There you go, we're in a
foxhole, so we're on the same team.
Heroes
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