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Octafish

(55,745 posts)
12. Friends who are judges sitting in courts don't know this VITAL history.
Sun Jun 7, 2015, 03:41 PM
Jun 2015

Eyes get big as saucers when they hear it. They can't believe their eyes when they see the story in print.



Annals of Government - (How the US Armed Iraq)

In the Loop: Bush's Secret Mission

By Murray Waas and Craig Unger
The New Yorker Magazine - Originally published November 2, 1992
Posted to the web November 14, 2002

Introduction

This article, originally published in New Yorker Magazine, provides a clear picture of the direct involvement of the United States in arming Iraq, providing Saddam Hussein with technology, weapons, intelligence and funding - even in contravention of American law - enabling Iraq to amass the nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons that threaten the world. While the US does not openly acknowledge its role in arming Iraq, it now prepares to go to war against a monster of its own creation...

Since this article provides an excellent in-depth analysis of the US's dysfunctional Middle East policy dating back to the administrations of Presidents Reagan and Bush, it also provides the best perspective from which to view the Pollard case. As long as the US acknowledges no responsibility for its role in arming Iraq, Jonathan Pollard will continue to be buried alive in prison by successive American administrations fearing exposure and embarrassment.

***

In late July, 1986, William J. Casey, then the Director of Central Intelligence, sat down with George Bush, then the Vice-President of the United States, in an out-of-the-way study that Casey maintained on the third floor of the old Executive Office Building, the rococo structure adjoining the White House. Casey had something he wanted Bush to do.

For many years, both Bush and Casey had moved easily in the worlds of foreign policy and Republican politics, and Bush had once held Casey's job. But their relationship was never entirely comfortable. Casey, gruff and perpetually disheveled, was the product of public and parochial schools in Queens and on Long Island - his father was a Tammany Hall pension bureaucrat - and of Fordham. Bush, elaborately friendly in manner, was the offspring of Connecticut gentry. Like his father, an investment banker who served in the Senate, Bush attended Yale and was tapped for Skull and Bones. Casey made millions on his own as a stock speculator; Bush, with family help, grew moderately prosperous in the oil business before his political rise in Houston. Both men held high posts under Richard Nixon, but Nixon himself treated Casey as an equal and Bush condescendingly. It was under Gerald Ford that Bush was appointed to the job Casey now held.

The two men were different in more than background. Casey was part of the rising conservative movement, the historic antagonist of Bush and his ancestors within the Republican Party. In the Cold War, Casey believed not in containment but in what in the late forties and early fifties had been called rollback. He saw every stirring in every corner of the world through an unchanging ideological prism. Bush, by contrast, was a consummate pragmatist. As Casey knew, Bush was capable of rapidly adopting new positions if expediency or advancement seemed to demand it. He had done so on the issue of recognizing China under Nixon, and he had done so on abortion and on economic policy when he became Ronald Reagan's running mate. According to someone who knew both men, Casey had originally distrusted Bush's lack of conviction. Lately, however, he had begun to see Bush's pragmatism in a new light. Whatever vision the Vice-President might lack, he was a man of immense personal discipline, and he understood accommodation as a way to achieve goals. Moreover, during his service as permanent representative to the United Nations, as chief of the United States liaison office in China, and as director of the C.I.A., he had mastered the arts of compartmentalization and secrecy. "Casey knew there was nobody in government who could keep a secret better," a former high-level C.I.A. official who worked with Casey has told us. "He knew that Bush was someone who could keep his confidence and be trusted. Bush had the same capacity as Casey to receive a briefing and give no hint that he was in the know."

Now, in 1986, Casey, seventy-three years old and suffering from prostate cancer, said he needed Bush to run a covert errand. Iran was proving recalcitrant in secret negotiations to exchange arms for hostages who were being held in Beirut by terrorists with links to Iran, so Casey had dreamed up a scheme for forcing Iran's hand. It requires someone of authority to convey a message to Iran's enemy Saddam Hussein, the President of Iraq, indirectly and without leaving fingerprints. Vice-President Bush was the ideal courier. He was about to visit the capitals of countries in the Middle East in order to "advance the peace process" between Israelis and Arabs, as he told the New York Times. But if he accepted Casey's assignment he would also be there to advance the war process; that is, to heat up the war between Iran and Iraq, with an incendiary message from Washington to Baghdad - escalate the air war and escalate the bombing deep inside Iranian territory.

Casey's reasoning was that if Saddam Hussein could be induced to order his fastidiously cautious Air Force to attack Iran in strength, Iran would be forced to turn anew to the United States for missiles and other weapons of air defense. The United States would then use its enhanced leverage to get better terms from the Iranians for the release of the hostages. (Casey may have been particularly concerned about the plight of one of the hostages, the Lebanon C.I.A. station chief William A. Buckley.) And for Casey there was another enticement as well, according to two Reagan Administration officials whom he frequently confided in; by bringing off this scheme, he would be manipulating two rival policy factions in the Administration.

CONTINUED...

http://www.jonathanpollard.org/2002/111402.htm



Swear to it in court.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

re: Bandar, that's the same Bandar "Bush" bin Sultan that's behind ISIS, right? Electric Monk Jun 2015 #1
Bandar Bush the Black Ops Bagman Octafish Jun 2015 #8
“Thank God for the Saudis and Prince Bandar,” John McCain told CNN in 2014 Electric Monk Jun 2015 #14
Prince Bandar was the rich uncle for SAFARI Club and later... Bill Casey at CIA Octafish Jun 2015 #28
Our arming of Iraq predates Bush the Elder.... Wounded Bear Jun 2015 #2
Exactly only difference - raygun armed both sides to fight the other. jwirr Jun 2015 #3
Well there is that... Wounded Bear Jun 2015 #5
He didn't invent the term "hedging your bet", but he sure used the hell out of it. bluesbassman Jun 2015 #6
Good point. Safire's focusing on BNL. Saddam and Rummy were doing ChemWarCo biz. Octafish Jun 2015 #10
Ha! SoapBox Jun 2015 #13
Pruneface shoulda ended up making license plates. Then, we wouldn't need worry about Jebthro. Octafish Jun 2015 #24
The CIA cozied up to the Baath Party and SH back in the early 60s when it and he were busy KingCharlemagne Jun 2015 #31
CIA exhibited disloyalty in South Vietnam. Octafish Jun 2015 #32
And the Soviets and France before that, and to a much greater degree. nt Codeine Jun 2015 #4
Yeah. But my tax dollars weren't going to the USSR or France. Octafish Jun 2015 #11
No argument there at all. nt Codeine Jun 2015 #18
If the American public cared what was going on Rosa Luxemburg Jun 2015 #7
Friends who are judges sitting in courts don't know this VITAL history. Octafish Jun 2015 #12
Rumsfeld was up to his neck in this Rosa Luxemburg Jun 2015 #23
The first to arm Iraq? Maybe ... JustABozoOnThisBus Jun 2015 #9
It's the Poland of the Middle East sarge43 Jun 2015 #15
The US is only responsible since CIA hired Saddam to kill democracy in Iraq, though. Octafish Jun 2015 #16
The BFEE post-WWII sure has lots of murderous assoCIAtes that armed Iran, Iraq and everyone "pro bobthedrummer Jun 2015 #17
Alan Friedman: ''Spider's Web'' & Banca Nazionale del Lavoro (BNL) Octafish Jun 2015 #19
Thanks for the memories johnnyreb Jun 2015 #20
Our man in Baghdad...Our man in Panama...Our man in Dallas... Our man in London... Octafish Jun 2015 #26
Lantos is covering HIS tracks. Wilms Jun 2015 #21
Yeah. The cop at the station is the same guy you just saw drive the getaway car. Octafish Jun 2015 #36
You can also find LOTS of information on BlueMTexpat Jun 2015 #22
Outstanding resources. Thank you. Octafish Jun 2015 #39
Thanks for posting your OP, Octafish! eom BlueMTexpat Jun 2015 #42
To paraphrase Colin Powell: cwydro Jun 2015 #25
K & R for truth malaise Jun 2015 #27
The enemy of my enemy is my customer Octafish Jun 2015 #40
Poppy Bush, Rumsfeld and Cheney could have been stopped then and there. No subpoenas, no indictment leveymg Jun 2015 #29
It's like an echo in history here. Octafish Jun 2015 #41
We see the same denial of Clinton issues that were demonstrated in 2008: Iran-Contra, BCCI, Stephens leveymg Jun 2015 #44
Integrity. Octafish Jun 2015 #46
There it is (truth) n/t bobthedrummer Jun 2015 #47
Same people created/armed the Taliban, AlQeada, and BinLaden Dems to Win Jun 2015 #30
Now, this is a thread worth reading. K&R JEB Jun 2015 #33
Kicked Enthusiast Jun 2015 #34
Great thread lots of content and no snark...nt Jesus Malverde Jun 2015 #35
Leonid Brezhnev One_Life_To_Give Jun 2015 #37
Hell of a racket indeed N/T UglyGreed Jun 2015 #38
This just in: Donald Rumsfeld denies he thought democracy in Iraq was "realistic" goal bobthedrummer Jun 2015 #43
K&R How to make a killing ignoring the killing making a killing. nt raouldukelives Jun 2015 #45
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