Here Comes The Draft
Across
the Rubicon
[©Copyright
2002, From The Wilderness Publications, www.copvcia.com.
All Rights Reserved. May be distributed, reposted on the
internet or distributed for non-profit purposes only]
There is not much joy this month in seeing that events
over the last year have unfolded exactly the way I said
they would. Having just returned from my 25th and 26th
lectures since last November in New Haven, Conn. and at
nearby Wesleyan University, I look back and see that for
seven months I have been publicly stating that we would
be invading Iraq by fall 2002.
I
see that since last December, and in every lecture since
my first at Portland State University, I have said clearly
and unequivocally that we are witnessing a sequential
war to control the largest reserves on a planet that is
running out of oil.
I
look back at our economic analyses and the two warnings
we published on Sept. 9, 2001 and July 8, 2002 and see
that the U.S economy is behaving exactly the way we predicted
it would behave. And from our stories last month on Iraq
and Saudi Arabia I see politics being played as a kind
of theater of the absurd, as all of the pieces fall into
place for a swift invasion of Iraq and a likely simultaneous
occupation of Saudi Arabia's oil fields.
And
there is no glee at all in the fact that, as we had clearly
stated as early as mid-September of last year, that Afghanistan,
which had virtually no opium growing on Sept. 11, is once
again the world's leading producer. The great heroin epidemic
we predicted is now flooding across Russia and Western
Europe.
I
note with little satisfaction that plans for mass vaccinations
are moving ahead even as the federal government announces
on the one hand a plan for "voluntary" immunization of
the population within days of an alert, while at the same
time pushing MEHPA (The Model Emergency Health Powers
Act) through state legislatures. MEHPA would make it a
crime -- possibly a felony -- to refuse those same "voluntary"
vaccinations. And the punishment would be carried out
by the states.
And
a recent AP story headlined "Evidence Contradicts Bush
9-11 Denial," following on the heels of dramatic testimony
by the charismatic and eloquent 9-11 widow Kristen Breitweiser,
along with ever more damning revelations in the
joint House Senate 9-11 intelligence committee have proved
that FTW's allegations a year ago of foreknowledge
were more than justified. Strange, isn't it, that it has
now been classified as to what the president was told
before the attacks? If he knew what we now know the intelligence
agencies knew, he is at the very least a proven and untrustworthy
liar. Bush's known actions before, during and since the
attacks are impeachable offenses. Perhaps some brave member
of Congress will ultimately take to the floor and say
so.
Anything is possible as the
economy approaches a near-certain meltdown this October,
which may well see the Dow below 6000 after devastating
third quarter earnings reports become official and the
explosion of a $50 trillion derivatives bubble occurs.
I can see no better combination of factors than a bloody
war, threats of or actual terrorist attacks, and draconian
health legislation that will allow for the immediate confiscation
of property and the uncontested quarantine of anyone as
convenient methods to control an angry population that
may soon be going hungry and cold. President Bush has
made it clear that he wants the Homeland Security Act
-- with all of its suppressive powers -- signed before
the Iraqi invasion and, as of Oct. 1, we will have the
Northern Command in place that will place both Mexican
and Canadian troops under U.S. command.
There has been some hope that
dramatic last ditch efforts in the U.N. and elsewhere,
together with an increasing number of significant protests
both in the U.S. and Europe might derail the plans for
war. They may actually delay the invasion for a short
while, but that's all. A wise analyst will follow the
troops rather than the rhetoric. The massive buildup for
the invasion has continued unabated. These troops cannot
remain so heavily forward-deployed for long without being
used. Recent convenient deployments to Yemen and Djibouti
only confirm my previously-stated suspicions that Saudi
Arabia is just as much a target as Iraq.
The Asia Times, in a story
published Sept. 30, also confirms the position taken by
FTW about eight weeks ago that the move against Iraq and
Saudi Arabia is a move to break the back of OPEC and drastically
reduce prices by increasing production from the only two
countries in the world that can open oil taps wider. This
position was also noted on a Sept. 28 Fox News show by
former CIA Director James Woolsey, who has had a habit
of addressing FTW themes in interviews. Woolsey noted
that Iraq is currently exporting only 1 million barrels
of oil a day and that this could be increased by 3- to
4 million barrels per day as a price "control" measure.
When asked if Saddam might scorch the earth and attempt
to destroy his oilfields Woolsey replied, "Saddam is capable
of anything." He then implied that the U.S. was prepared
for that contingency by recalling that Saddam had tried
that tactic in 1991, and the U.S. had quickly restored
production. "But we could do the same thing again," said
Woolsey and "get the fields online quicker than anyone
thought."
As the invasion plans appear
more and more unstoppable, the heavy shuttle diplomacy
taking place in the Arab world between Egypt, Syria, Saudi
Arabia and other Muslim states indicates that the OPEC/Muslim
world sees the plan also. They want to slow the U.S. down
and prevent the invasion. While staving off an inevitable
collapse of the U.S. economy by drastically reducing oil
prices (including heating oil and fuel for power generation)
just before winter, the Bush Administration would also
gut the national incomes of most countries in the region.
Our immediate economic instability would be immediately
transferred to the Middle East. The Saudi monarchy, awaiting
the imminent passing of King Fahd, must see this clearly.
The civil war between Princes Abdullah and Sultan that
looms from that event alone might turn into anarchy if
the Saudi government is suddenly unable to meet the domestic
financial obligations that keep it in place.
What seems clear to me now
is that the administration has thought through all of
these contingencies and has prepared for them. The administration's
arrogance is as frightening as its power. I have recently
learned from trusted sources on Capitol Hill that the
Armed Services committees have quietly begun planning
for a reinstitution of the draft. That harkens back to
my June 2000 essay, "When the Children of the Bull Market
Begin to Die." The eventual drafting of our youth is to
me as much a certainty as anything else I have written
about thus far. Reserve units, now having been called
up for more than a year, are nearing the breaking point.
A bloody and protracted war -- something the rest of the
world may now be hoping for -- will overextend our military,
and the draft will be essential as the criminals occupying
the Executive Branch desperately attempt to make their
grasp meet their reach. I think that there is better than
a 50-50 chance that nuclear weapons will be used on the
battlefield by either the U.S. or Israel within the next
six months.
Russia and China wait as close
to the sidelines as possible. China will be the ultimate
endgame as it competes with growing demand for dwindling
supplies of energy. And should the U.S. stumble, China
will exert herself even more on the world scene.
I am reminded of where this
country was in 1967-68 as the U.S. government, faced with
massive domestic riots over civil rights and anti-war
protests, found that it had 550,000 troops overseas and
not enough at home to keep the peace. It was then that
the assassinations of MLK and RFK became both inevitable
and necessary. As yet, no leader of such stature had emerged,
and I don't know if one will. Rep. Cynthia McKinney of
Georgia, ousted by a clever and well executed plan, was
one hope. But the ruling elite's science of population
and political control has come a long way since the 1960s.
Most of our critics, notably
David Corn of The Nation and self-anointed media critic
Norman Solomon, have gone silent as both our reporting
and predictions have been completely validated by events.
And both Corn and Solomon have also revealed themselves
to be agents of the U.S. State Department run by Colin
Powell and career covert operative and criminal Richard
Armitage. Last November in a story published on Alternet
Corn wrote, "I had been dispatched to Trinidad by the
U.S. State Department to conduct a two-day seminar on
investigative reporting for local journalists (your tax
dollars at work!)..." And just recently Norman Solomon of
the Institute for Public Accuracy traveled with sitting
congressman Nick Rahall and others on what CNN described
as an official delegation to meet with officials of the
Iraqi government.
I make these points because
it seems to me that the learning curve of activism has
not matched that of the oppressor. It is true that the
Internet may prove itself to be the saving grace of mankind.
But I look back at all the dedicated activists of the
last 30 years and ask what have they accomplished? Human
rights are worse. The environment is worse. Globalization
is batting near 1000. Military spending has skyrocketed.
And there seems to be nothing that can stop the empire's
progression. (That is what I labeled it in January 2001).
Visionaries like Catherine
Austin Fitts (www.solari.com) continue to demonstrate how our government
is not a government but a criminal enterprise run for
the benefit of corporations and syndicates. Her writing
about alternative economic models that succeed without
killing attracts far too little attention. And while FTW is growing, we are constantly short
of funds as we continue to provide the most accurate reporting,
analysis and predictions in the marketplace of ideas.
This is all because most of
the people in this country still avoid the hard realities
and try to cure symptoms rather than the causes of this
great illness that envelops our country. Just recently
I was in Washington, D.C. and attended several seminars
at the Congressional Black Caucus. One seminar, on COINTELPRO,
the FBI's domestic suppression operation of the '60s and
'70s, featured Martin Luther King III who said, "We are
a sick nation. Every day we are getting sicker."
I could not agree more.
But Julius Caesar has crossed
the little river called the Rubicon with his legions and
is heading toward Rome. The Republic is dead. And throughout
human history it was at these times, when answers were
hard to find and darkness seemed unstoppable, that a part
of the human spirit persisted -- "I will not give up.
I will not go quietly. I will not surrender." It was at
these moments that faith demonstrated its true power,
that courage found itself in the heart, and that the human
race justified its existence in the universe.