Heather Wokusch looks
at what the CIA is really doing to the people it claims to protect.
Dysfunctional Bush and his anachronistic cronies are
leading us right into a catastrophic Middle Eastern blowout.
That much is apparent. But what's not so clear is why we're
allowing it to happen.
Analyzing Dubya's psychological challenges is not enough - he's
the symptom not the cause, and while the rapidity of societal
decline has seemed to accelerate since 2000's farcical US presidential
election, the framework for rollback was in place long before.
If it hadn't been, citizens quite simply wouldn't have tolerated
the rigged results.
But what mechanisms could have been used to facilitate the rollback?
How can an unwilling population be trained to blindly accept
a new, repressive social order?
A CIA instruction manual entitled Psychological
Operations in Guerrilla Warfare provides some clues. Written
in the early 1980s (coincidentally, soon after Bush Sr. headed
the Agency) the document was part of the US government's crusade
to bring down Nicaragua's leftist government, by providing training
and weapons to the Contra rebels. Detailing how to gain a community's
support through propaganda and selective violence, the manual
begins "In effect, the human being should be considered
the priority objective in a political war ... Once his mind
has been reached, the 'political animal' has been defeated,
without necessarily receiving bullets."
The following are quotes from the original psyop textbook, along
with contemporary examples-
PSYOP quote: "It is appropriate ... to guide the discussion
of a group to cover a number of points and to reach a correct
conclusion." The people "should feel it was their
free and own decision."
Interesting to note that up until early 2000, military personnel
from the Fourth Psychological Operations Group based in Fort
Bragg, North Carolina were active at CNN's Atlanta-based headquarters
- and left only after public outcry when CNN admitted to employing
them. Their presence was perhaps not surprising given former
CIA director William Colby's boast that "the Central Intelligence
Agency owns everyone of any major significance in the major
media."
So much for a democratic free flow of information.
Also striking is how the "discussion" around attacking
Iraq is being guided "to reach a correct conclusion."
After both the House and Senate agreed to give Bush his blank
check to attack Iraq (requesting only that Bush report to Congress
every 60 days if he does decide to take action) Senate Majority
Leader Tom Daschle called the endorsement of war "a statement
of American values and resolve." Apparently Daschle was
unaware of the large anti-war street protests taking place across
the country, and the overwhelming number of anti-war phone calls
flooding House and Senate offices.
Now that the vote is finished, the media will no doubt bombard
with messages echoing Daschle's myopic observation, and assuring
the American population the vote for war was their "free
and own decision."
PSYOP quote: "Always be prepared with simple slogans in
order to explain to the people, whether in intentional form
or by chance, the reason for the weapons." Reasons such
as: "The weapons will be for winning freedom; they are
for you," or "Our weapons are, in truth, the weapons
of the people, yours."
The Bush administration proposes to increase its annual military
budget by $120 billion (over one third) by 2007, which would
bring the total annual budget to $451 billion; this while the
economy crumbles and social services get left behind. The justification?
George W. Bush
"Nothing is more important than the national security of
our country. So nothing is more important than our defense budget.
The price for freedom is high, but it's never too high as far
as I'm concerned."
Donald Rumsfeld
"The defense budget is cheap when one compares it to putting
our security at risk, our lives at risk, our country at risk,
our freedom at risk."
PSYOP quote: "In places and situations wherever possible
... explain the operation of weapons to the youths and young
men."
A endless war requires an endless supply of cannon fodder; lucky
for the military if enough recruits succumb to the sexy hype
about weapons and enlist. If they don't though, there's always
the Universal Military Training and Service Act (H.R. 3598)
which, aiming to bring back the draft, states: "ALL males
residing in the U.S. between the ages of 18-22 (must) receive
military training for at least 6 months" and imposes additional
time on high school dropouts.
Chew on that quote for a second. The high school dropout part
is self-explanatory; longer military sentences would effectively
be forced on poor kids and minorities, those most likely to
drop out of school. The "residing" part is odd though
- apparently, even citizens of other countries who happen to
live in the US will be obligated to complete military service
for Uncle Sam.
So it appears every trick in the book will be used to get our
youth on the battlefield, but once those boys come home wounded
or in body bags, they and their families will be abandoned,
at least if Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld has his way.
Addressing the Armed Services Committee, Rumsfeld recently claimed
he had no knowledge of the US having ever shipped any biological
weapons to Iraq; Rumsfeld said he had no knowledge despite the
existence of substantial proof, including a widely-distributed
1994 Senate Report documenting the US sale of bacteria and viruses
to Iraq.
The medical issue becomes even more serious when considering
the fact that biological warfare agents don't affect only those
service members directly exposed: they can lie undetected and
later be transferred to family and friends back home. This is
the stuff of epidemics, and the DOD's head-in-the-sand handling
of the physical maladies of Gulf War veterans has only exacerbated
the danger to us all.
Small wonder that, unlike hawkish politicians who have never
seen battle, many Gulf War vets oppose an attack on Iraq. And
Rumsfeld had better take notice: the American Gulf War Veterans
Association (AGWVA) is so appalled by his claim of ignorance
about the weapons sale - and attending denial about the dangers
of a new war with Iraq - they've officially called for his resignation.
PSYOP quote: "Established citizens ... will be recruited
initially as 'Social Crusaders' in typically 'innocuous' movements
in the area of operations. When their 'involvement' with the
clandestine organization is revealed to them, this supplies
the psychological pressure to use them as 'inside cadres' in
groups to which they already belong or of which they can be
members."
Operation TIPS, US Attorney General John Ashcroft's plan to
enlist citizens in spying on one another is down, but definitely
not out. Due to public outcry, postal and utilities workers
may have been exempted but employees of "industry associations
and groups" in the broadly-defined transportation sector
are still being "invited to receive information" on
the program. It's anyone's guess who the invitation will be
extended to next...
PSYOP quote: "Bring about uprisings or shootings, which
will cause the death of one or more persons, who would become
the martyrs ... in order to create greater conflicts."
In "Body of Secrets," respected journalist James Bradford
explores official government records in which the Pentagon "called
for innocent people to be shot on American streets, for boats
... to be sunk on the high seas, for a wave of violent terrorism
to be launched in Washington D.C., Miami and elsewhere,"
for "people to be framed for bombings they did not commit"
and for planes to be hijacked, all in the name of convincing
Congress and the American public to support a new war. Bradford
writes about the early 1960s, but many of the Pentagon's proposals
then seem uncomfortably reminiscent today.
So whatever happened to the basic foundations of "life,
liberty and the pursuit of happiness"? Have we really gone
so far astray that independent thought is a thing of the past,
trampled in the dirt by an artificial psyop reality?
Time to read through those Amendments once again, slowly. Then
take a careful look at the insidious ways we're being controlled,
and throw off the shackles.
Heather Wokusch is a
free-lance writer. She can be contacted via her web site: www.heatherwokusch.com