Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The site is a sister to Atlantic Free Press and Brick Ogden an American Expatriate in Amsterdam has been a key supporter of this project.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
First he notes the self-evident truths that we alluded to in our hurried piece on the matter the other day: "that this latest NIE tells us nothing -- let me repeat that, nothing -- that was not entirely obvious to a reasonably intelligent layperson following mainstream media reports about Iran for the last several years," and that the report "simply means that the warmongers, whether of the Republican or Democratic variety...cannot easily avail themselves of this particular bogeyman for the moment. For those who seek to begin the next phase of this neverending war, there are many other bogeymen available for use to the identical end."
But as is his wont, Silber delves deeper, and repeats a rare insight he has offered before:
The
reaction from all quarters to the NIE relies on several interrelated
central assumptions, ones that are regarded as so unquestionably true
that no one thinks they need to be stated: that major policy decisions,
including decisions of war and peace, are based on intelligence in the
first place; that a decision to go to war is one made only after cool
and careful rational deliberation; and that nations go to war for the
reasons they announce to the world.
ALL OF THIS IS ABSOLUTELY, UNEQUIVOCALLY FALSE.
He then quotes from an earlier essay on the subject:
Intelligence
is completely irrelevant to major policy decisions. Such decisions are
matters of judgment, and knowledgeable, ordinary citizens are just as
capable of making these determinations as political leaders allegedly
in possession of "secret information." Such "secret information" is
almost always wrong -- and major decisions, including those pertaining
to war and peace, are made entirely apart from such information in any
case.
The second you start arguing about intelligence, you've
given the game away once again. This is a game the government and the
proponents of war will always win. By now, we all surely know that if
they want the intelligence to show that Country X is a "grave" and
"growing" threat, they will find it or manufacture it. So once you're
debating what the intelligence shows or fails to show, the debate is
over. The war will inevitably begin...
To
repeat...[intelligence] is always irrelevant to major policy decisions,
and such decisions are reached for different reasons altogether. This
is true whether the intelligence is correct or not, and it is almost
always wrong. On those very rare occasions when intelligence is
accurate, it is likely to be disregarded in any case. It will certainly
be disregarded if it runs counter to a course to which policymakers are
already committed.
The intelligence does not matter. It is
primarily used as propaganda, to provide alleged justification to a
public that still remains disturbingly gullible and pliable -- and it
is used after the fact, to justify decisions that have already been
made.
Several commenters -- including some astute EB readers
-- have noted that the Bush Regime has already used the story to
perform a neat bit of jiu-jitsu on many of its critics. By accepting
the NIE report uncritically -- because part of it does indeed reveal
that the Bushists have been lying about the Iranian threat for years --
they inadvertantly (or willingly) buy into the report's underlying
assumption: that Iran really was building a bomb all these years, and
only stopped because big bad Bush rolled into Baghdad and put the fear
of God into them. Thus the report can be seen as accepting a bit of
short-lived bad PR -- "NIE Report Muddies the Water in Administration
Stance on Iran," etc. (and that's as bad as it would ever get with the
corporate media) -- in exchange for "confirmation" of the Regime's
basic contention (the dire threat posed by Iran) and another
"justification" of the war crime in Iraq.
Silber ably dispatches that last sinister canard:
Several
of the reactions collected by Glenn Reynolds advance the notion that,
assuming the NIE is accurate, this demonstrates that the invasion and
occupation of Iraq did in fact lead to the elimination of a gravely
serious threat, namely, the threat that an Iran with nuclear weapons
would have represented. If the invasion and occupation of Iraq
prevented such a development, that means the Iraq catastrophe was
justified.
It is difficult to imagine a more heinously bankrupt
moral argument. Iraq itself was no threat to the United States, and it
was known to be no threat. We have destroyed Iraq completely, unleashed
a genocide that continues with every blood-drenched day that passes,
created refugees in the several millions, and wreaked havoc and
devastation in numerous other ways. Because Iraq was known to be no
threat to the U.S., the U.S. did all this in a criminal war of
aggression -- precisely the kind of crime against peace for which we
properly condemned the Nazi regime. Yet now it is suggested that all
this was morally justified -- because it may have prevented a threat
from arising in another country. Because most Americans know only the
mythologized, sanitized version of our history, many of you may be
surprised to learn that this was one of the "justifications" used to
defend the incineration of hundreds of thousands of civilians at
Hiroshima and Nagasaki -- to deliver a "message" to Soviet Russia. It
was abominable then, and it is abominable now.
He then lays
into the uncritical acceptance of the NIE estimate by liberal bloggers,
focusing on Digby's reaction, especially her comment that the
Republicans might be "nuts" enough to attack Iran anyway:
On
that last point and insofar as the crucial general principles involved
are concerned, may it be duly noted that the leading Democrats are just
as "hawkish" and "nuts" on this issue: Hillary Clinton, who speaks of
our inalienable "right" to take "offensive military action against
Iran"; Barack Obama ("In today's globalized world, the security of the
American people is inextricably linked to the security of all people,"
which is license to intervene anywhere and everywhere, on any pretext
whatsoever, real or imagined); and all the other prominent Democrats,
with their endless trash talk of keeping "all options on the table."
Silber
then points out -- as he has done before -- another indisputable but
entirely ignored truth: that even if Iran had a nuclear weapon, it
would not pose a direct threat to the United States.
In the
most critical sense, I don't care about this latest assessment, just as
I did not care about the earlier ones, about Iran or on any other
subject at all -- for in addition to the rather important fact that
such assessments are invariably wrong, I recognize that policy
decisions are made on different grounds altogether. Moreover, in terms
of U.S. foreign policy, I don't care if Iran does get nuclear weapons.
As I have noted before, I do not view it as a remotely good thing that
any nation has nuclear weapons, including the U.S. -- and I remind you
once again that it is only the U.S. that has used them, when it did not
have any legitimate reason for doing so and when it lied about every
aspect of its actions and their consequences. But in terms of an Iran
with nuclear weapons five or ten years in the future: "So Iran Gets
Nukes. So What?" But the bipartisan commitment to American world
hegemony has not altered in the slightest degree. The criminal
catastrophe of Iraq is irrelevant to our ruling class, and it has not
caused them to alter any of their most crucial goals.
Finally,
Silber notes yet another incontrovertible truth: that the Bush Regime
has already laid in another store of "justifications" for a war with
Iran -- justifications that have been eagerly embraced by the
Democrats. (For more on this, see "War Alarms Drowned by Beltway
Bloodlust" and "The Senate's Blank Check for War with Iran.")
This
brings us to the most likely way in which a conflict with Iran may
still occur in the very near future: as the direct result of the
continuing, ghastly, genocidal, criminal occupation of Iraq. In moral
and historic terms, it is unforgivable that the Democratic Congress has
not defunded the Iraq occupation completely. They have the power to do
so, and they refuse to use it. Some people object to defunding on the
grounds that Bush will use other funds to pay for it -- and the
Democratic Congress has obligingly provided plenty of those. But if
Bush is going to do that, then make him do it. It is only the
nauseating corruption of our politics that makes it necessary to point
out that decent human beings would choose not to have blood on their
own hands. With two or three exceptions, there are no such decent human
beings to be found in Washington.
There is much, much more
in Silber's essay -- including all the essential links that I've
omitted here in my midnight haste. Do yourself a favor, give yourself
an education, and go read the whole thing now.