WASHINGTON - IPS uncovered the remarks
by Philip Zelikow, who is now the executive director of the
body set up to investigate the terrorist attacks on the United
States in September 2001 -- the 9/11 commission -- in which
he suggests a prime motive for the invasion just over one
year ago was to eliminate a threat to Israel, a staunch U.S.
ally in the Middle East.
Zelikow's casting of the attack on Iraq
as one launched to protect Israel appears at odds with the
public position of President George W. Bush and his administration,
which has never overtly drawn the link between its war on
the regime of former president Hussein and its concern for
Israel's security.
The administration has instead insisted
it launched the war to liberate the Iraqi people, destroy
Iraq's weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and to protect the
United States.
Zelikow made his statements about ”the
unstated threat” during his tenure on a highly knowledgeable
and well-connected body known as the President's Foreign Intelligence
Advisory Board (PFIAB), which reports directly to the president.
He served on the board between 2001 and
2003.
Why would Iraq
attack America or use nuclear weapons against us?
I'll tell you what I think the real threat (is) and actually
has been since 1990 -- it's the threat against Israel,”
Zelikow told a crowd at the University of Virginia on Sep.
10, 2002, speaking on a panel of foreign policy experts assessing
the impact of 9/11 and the future of the war on the al-Qaeda
terrorist organization.
”And this is the threat that dare
not speak its name, because the Europeans don't care deeply
about that threat, I will tell you frankly. And the American
government doesn't want to lean too hard on it rhetorically,
because it is not a popular sell,” said Zelikow.
The statements are the first to surface
from a source closely linked to the Bush administration acknowledging
that the war, which has so far cost the lives of nearly 600
U.S. troops and thousands of Iraqis, was motivated by Washington's
desire to defend the Jewish state.
The administration, which is surrounded
by staunch pro-Israel, neo-conservative hawks, is currently
fighting an extensive campaign to ward off accusations that
it derailed the ”war on terrorism” it launched
after 9/11 by taking a detour to Iraq, which appears to have
posed no direct threat to the United States.
Israel is Washington's biggest ally in
the Middle East, receiving annual direct aid of three to four
billion dollars.
Even though members of the 16-person PFIAB
come from outside government, they enjoy the confidence of
the president and have access to all information related to
foreign intelligence that they need to play their vital advisory
role.
Known in intelligence circles as ”Piffy-ab”,
the board is supposed to evaluate the nation's intelligence
agencies and probe any mistakes they make.
The unpaid appointees on the board require
a security clearance known as ”code word” that
is higher than top secret.
The national security adviser to former
President George H.W. Bush (1989-93) Brent Scowcroft, currently
chairs the board in its work overseeing a number of intelligence
bodies, including the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), the
various military intelligence groups and the Pentagon's National
Reconnaissance Office.
Neither Scowcroft nor Zelikow returned
numerous phone calls and email messages from IPS for this
story.
Zelikow has long-established ties to the
Bush administration.
Before his appointment to PFIAB in October
2001, he was part of the current president's transition team
in January 2001.
In that capacity, Zelikow drafted a memo
for National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice on reorganizing
and restructuring the National Security Council (NSC) and
prioritizing its work.
Richard A. Clarke, who was counter-terrorism
coordinator for Bush's predecessor President Bill Clinton
(1993-2001) also worked for Bush senior, and has recently
accused the current administration of not heeding his terrorism
warnings, said Zelikow was among those he briefed about the
urgent threat from al-Qaeda in December 2000.
Rice herself had served in the NSC during
the first Bush administration, and subsequently teamed up
with Zelikow on a 1995 book about the unification of Germany.
Zelikow had ties with another senior Bush
administration official -- Robert Zoellick, the current trade
representative. The two wrote three books together, including
one in 1998 on the United States and the ”Muslim Middle
East”.
Aside from his position at the 9/11 commission,
Zelikow is now also director of the Miller Center of Public
Affairs and White Burkett Miller Professor of History at the
University of Virginia.
His close ties to the administration prompted
accusations of a conflict of interest in 2002 from families
of victims of the 9/11 attacks, who protested his appointment
to the investigative body.
In his university speech, Zelikow, who
strongly backed attacking the Iraqi dictator, also explained
the threat to Israel by arguing that Baghdad was preparing
in 1990-91 to spend huge amounts of ”scarce hard currency”
to harness ”communications against electromagnetic pulse”,
a side-effect of a nuclear explosion that could sever radio,
electronic and electrical communications.
That was ”a perfectly absurd expenditure
unless you were going to ride out a nuclear exchange -- they
(Iraqi officials) were not preparing to ride out a nuclear
exchange with us. Those were preparations to ride out a nuclear
exchange with the Israelis”, according to Zelikow.
He also suggested that the danger of biological
weapons falling into the hands of the anti-Israeli Islamic
Resistance Movement, known by its Arabic acronym Hamas, would
threaten Israel rather than the United States, and that those
weapons could have been developed to the point where they
could deter Washington from attacking Hamas.
”Play out those scenarios,”
he told his audience, ”and I will tell you, people have
thought about that, but they are just not talking very much
about it”.
”Don't look at the links between
Iraq and al-Qaeda, but then ask yourself the question, 'gee,
is Iraq tied to Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad and
the people who are carrying out suicide bombings in Israel'?
Easy question to answer; the evidence is abundant.”
To date, the possibility of the United
States attacking Iraq to protect Israel has been only timidly
raised by some intellectuals and writers, with few public
acknowledgements from sources close to the administration.
Analysts who reviewed Zelikow's statements
said they are concrete evidence of one factor in the rationale
for going to war, which has been hushed up.
”Those of us speaking about it sort
of routinely referred to the protection of Israel as a component,”
said Phyllis Bennis of the Washington-based Institute of Policy
Studies. ”But this is a very good piece of evidence
of that.”
Others say the administration should be
blamed for not making known to the public its true intentions
and real motives for invading Iraq.
”They (the administration) made a
decision to invade Iraq, and then started to search for a
policy to justify it. It was a decision in search of a policy
and because of the odd way they went about it, people are
trying to read something into it,” said Nathan Brown,
professor of political science at George Washington University
and an expert on the Middle East.
But he downplayed the Israel link. ”In
terms of securing Israel, it doesn't make sense to me because
the Israelis are probably more concerned about Iran than they
were about Iraq in terms of the long-term strategic threat,”
he said.
Still, Brown says Zelikow's words carried
weight.
”Certainly his position would allow
him to speak with a little bit more expertise about the thinking
of the Bush administration, but it doesn't strike me that
he is any more authoritative than Wolfowitz, or Rice or Powell
or anybody else. All of them were sort of fishing about for
justification for a decision that has already been made,”
Brown said
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