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Behind State Department, CIA shake-up: Bush-Cheney regime
prepares a second term of all-out militarism
By Patrick Martin
17 November 2004
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The resignation of Secretary of State Colin Powell and the
forcing out of a whole layer of top CIA officials is a signal
that the Bush administration is clearing the decks for an even
more aggressive and unilateral foreign and military policy during
the second Bush-Cheney term.
Powells resignation was made public Monday, and was followed
the next day by Bushs announcement that he was nominating
his national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, to be the new
Secretary of State. Rice will be confirmed swiftly by the Republican-controlled
Senate, and could take office even before Bushs second inauguration
on January 20.
Throughout the first four years of the Bush administration,
Powell and the State Department have been viewed with suspicion
or outright hostility by right-wing neo-conservative elements
entrenched in the civilian leadership of the Pentagon and in Vice
President Cheneys office.
Neither Powell nor his chief deputy, Richard Armitage, opposed
the Bush administrations wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, but
they were regarded as too closely aligned to the traditional foreign
policy methods of American imperialism favored by career State
Department and CIA officials, based on utilizing alliance structures
like NATO and international institutions like the UN.
Powell repeatedly clashed with Vice President Cheney and Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, the principal advocates of a more
hard-line policy, not only towards Iraq, but in relations with
Iran and North Korea, classified like Iraq as part of Bushs
notorious axis of evil. These conflicts paralyzed
US policy towards Iranin four years, the Bush administration
never succeeded in drafting a coherent position paperand
led to a series of erratic shifts in relation to North Korea.
There were also reported clashes over US policy towards the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, with Powell resisting the White
House inclination to give a blank check to Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon, in favor of preserving the illusion that Washington
could act as a broker between the two sides.
In the long-running interagency battles over Iraq, the State
Department lost far more than it won. Powell prevailed in August
2002 when he urged Bush to seek a UN Security Council resolution
as a cover for the US decision to attack Iraq. But the Pentagon
was given full authority, not only over the invasion proper, but
over all post-conquest planning, and the Coalition Provisional
Authority and its chief, Paul Bremer, worked under the direction
of Rumsfeld. It was not until the establishment of the puppet
Allawi government on June 30, 2004 that the State Department,
through the new ambassador in Iraq, US proconsul John Negroponte,
was given the leading political role in the occupation regime.
The removal of Powell and Armitage, while Rumsfeld continues
in the Pentagon together with his deputy Paul Wolfowitz, marks
a clear victory for the most bellicose faction in the administration.
Rice generally sided with Rumsfeld and Cheney in the internecine
battles over policy, although she played no independent role and
was regarded as hopelessly over her head, even by supporters of
the war in Iraq.
The New York Times observed Tuesday that what Rice actually
thought on key issues was something of a mystery. Ms. Rice
has kept her foreign policy views largely to herself over the
last four years, the newspapers front-page article
on the nomination said. This is remarkable, given that the Times
is describing the person who has occupied the position of national
security adviser for the past four years, and whose principal
claim to fame is that she was Bushs tutor in foreign policy.
Rices main role as Secretary of State will be to install
more hard-line officials in the second and third-tier positions
in the department and suppress any criticism of Bush administration
policy from within the career Foreign Service. Such criticism
has reflected concern, based on actual knowledge of the countries
targetedsomething in very short supply in the White House
and Pentagonthat the Bush administrations methods
will actually undermine the long-term interests of American imperialism.
The purge of top officials in the CIA is an even more glaring
case of suppressing any potential source of internal criticism
or restraint on Bush administration foreign policy. On November
12, deputy CIA director John McLaughlin resigned, to be followed
three days later by the deputy director for operations, Stephen
Kappes, and his top deputy, Michael Slusick. This brings to nine
the number of top-ranking CIA officials to depart since former
director George Tenet was replaced by Porter Goss, a Republican
congressman and head of the House Intelligence Committee. Only
two of Tenets top aides still remain.
McLaughlins retirement had been expected after he was
passed over for the position of CIA director in favor of Goss.
He had been the number two official in the agency since 2000.
Kappes and Slusick, however, had just assumed their posts in
the summer, moving up after the retirement of longtime operations
chief James Pavitt. They quit after an angry confrontation with
Gosss top aide, Patrick Murray. Slusick reportedly referred
to Murray, a former House committee staffer, as a Hill puke,
while Murray demanded that Kappes fire Slusick, an instruction
that Kappes refused.
It was the outcome of the November 2 election that apparently
brought the tensions within the agency to the point of a shouting
match. Goss, whose committee produced a report on the September
11 attacks that described the CIA operations directorate as dysfunctional,
was widely regarded as a lame duck appointee who would be out
of office in January in the event of a Kerry victory.
Sections of the CIA officialdom were effectively aligned with
the Democratic campaign, providing a series of leaks to the press
demonstrating that the White House had lied about prewar planning
for postwar Iraq and debunking various Bush lies about the war
on terror. The agency even authorized one top CIA official,
Michael Scheuer, former head of the bin Laden unit, to publish
a bookunder the pseudonym anonymousdenouncing
the White House for failing to take the threat of bin Laden seriously
before the 9/11 attacks. Scheuer also quit the agency, on November
11.
Goss has brought with him into the CIA four top aides from
the House Intelligence Committee, all far-right Republican Party
activists determined to remove any political opponents from the
agencys leadership.
The right-wing press, spearheaded by the editorial page of
the Wall Street Journal, has demanded such a purge of both
the CIA and the State Department. At the time the pre-election
leaks, the Journal published an editorial denouncing the
CIA for declaring war on the Bush White House. The
newspaper greeted Powells resignation with an editorial
demanding that Bush stamp out similar opposition in the diplomatic
corps.
In both the State Department and the CIA, it should go without
saying, the opposition to Bush is within the framework of the
defense of imperialist interests. Both agencies are staffed by
battle-hardened defenders of American imperialism who have participated
in countless crimes against working people on every continent.
Their opposition to Bush arises largely from the debacle produced
in Iraq by a policy that deliberately ignored the complex politics
of the country and the Middle East as a whole, in favor of a crude
doctrine that the United States could have its way by force alone.
The result of the bureaucratic infighting is that the Bush
White House is moving to concentrate power in fewer and fewer
hands, riding roughshod over the established institutions of American
imperialism. As the Knight-Ridder news service observed: by
agreeing to Powells departure and approving an apparent
purge by new CIA chief Porter Goss, Bush and Vice President Dick
Cheney appear to be eliminating the few independent centers of
power in the US national security apparatus and cementing the
system under their personal control.
This trajectory leads inexorably to new and bloodier disasters,
not only in Iraq itself, but in other countries and regions targeted
by the White House gangsters, and for the American people as well,
who will pay the price for a new round of military adventures.
See Also:
After the 2004 election: perspectives
and tasks of the Socialist Equality Party
[15 November 2004]
The SEP's 2004 campaign: a preparation
for coming battles
[5 November 2004]
After the 2004 elections: the political
and social crisis will intensify
[3 November 2004]
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