We're Halfway There- Bonjovi on a Prayer
October 28th 2007 13:49
Cheney’s out to start a war;;
He’s lost all control, he can’t take it anymore, anymore;;
Revolution’s the name of the game;;
Revolution in military affairs;;
Mercenary killers, killers, yeah: killers yeah;;:
We gotta stop the 9/11 coup d’etat;;
Or else the USA is a goner for sure;;
We can still talk to Russia and Iran;;
So, come on folks and give me a hand;;
Ohhh, the Putin Plan;
For making peace with Iran;;
You gotta reap just what you sowed;;
Build the Alaska Railroad;;
Just like in 1917;;
The Brits have lost power, they want revenge for their colonies;;
Colonies;;
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If we don’t want endless war, like the 1917 Parvus Plan, of endless war, endless revolution, starting in Russia, we must act now. We must oust Cheney and get the USA to cooperate with Putin’s Russia, and the other big players of Eurasia. Europe is a bunch of babbling parliamentarians, who are ousted by the media and the oligarchy the minute they act like they have a real idea.
The fact that the neo-cons are infested with a bunch of Parvus Plan pushing former -Trotskyites is another important point to keep in mind. Here's the later from former Dem. Candidate Wesley Clark:
One of the most stunning denunciations of the Cheney war schemes was delivered in Washington on October 17 by Wesley Clark, a retired five-star general and former candidate for the Democratic Presidential nomination.
Speaking before several hundred American and Arab policy-makers at the 16th annual conference of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations (NCUSAR), Clark urged a vigorous public debate on the Iran situation, leading to a new diplomatic dialogue with Tehran, and pointedly denounced the Bush Administration's war policies as part of a continuing “political coup d'etat” that was carried out, from the White House, after the September 11, 2001 attacks.
Clark charged that, following 9-11, a small group inside the Bush Administration imposed a new strategy, without debate, without Congressional authorization, and without consultation with America's allies. Clark recounted a May 1991 private conversation he had with then-Pentagon official Paul Wolfowitz and his deputy Lewis “Scooter” Libby. Clark recounted Wolfowitz's berating of then-President George H.W. Bush, for failing to conclude Operation Desert Storm with the overthrow of Saddam Hussein. Wolfowitz told Clark that, within “the next 5-10 years,” the United States must overthrow a string of “former Soviet client-states,” including Syria, Iraq, and Iran. Wolfowitz told the flabbergasted general that the United States would have that window of opportunity to “use military force with impunity” before a new, as-yet unknown “superpower” emerged to challenge American global military hegemony.
General Clark recounted that when then-Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney, along with Wolfowitz and Libby, took their “Roman Empire” scheme to National Security Advisor Brent Scowcroft and President Bush, they were forcefully rebuked. After 9-11, Clark charged, Cheney and Wolfowitz resurrected the scheme, but never informed the American people or the Congress, because “they would have been laughed off the stage,” and denounced for “flights of fantasy.” Nevertheless, Clark reported, a written plan was circulated in the Rumsfeld Pentagon right after 9-11, listing seven regimes to be overthrown in the next five years: Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Iran, Libya, Sudan, and Somalia. Now, Clark concluded, “we are living with the consequences,” including the $800 billion spent to date on Iraq and Afghanistan. “The U.S. is weaker, our adversaries are stronger.”
In response to a question from EIR, Clark urged diplomacy with both Iran and Syria. “Find common interests, avert war, and help our friends in the region,” he demanded, asking “Aren't we big enough to do this?” The alternative, he warned, is a two-three-week bombing campaign, that will render Iran “a failed state,” but with the most dire consequences for the United States and the world.
The message delivered by General Clark resonated throughout the two-day policy-makers conference, and also reflected in an escalation of war-avoidance initiatives by leading international players, including President Putin.
If we don't get the type of international cooperation with the United States that we need, the problems are going to be a lot worse than people missing their mortgage payments and being evicted from their real estate.
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