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石油を強奪し、私欲を満たすための殺戮は、絵に描いたように周到に進められて行く。
2002年9月15日のSundayHerald.
Neil Mackay記者の記事より。
Bush planned Iraq 'regime change'
before
becoming President
A SECRET blueprint for US global
domination
reveals that President Bush and
his cabinet
were planning a premeditated
attack on Iraq
to secure 'regime change' even
before he
took power in January 2001.
The blueprint, uncovered by the
Sunday Herald,
for the creation of a 'global
Pax Americana'
was drawn up for Dick Cheney
(now vice- president),
Donald Rumsfeld (defence secretary),
Paul
Wolfowitz (Rumsfeld's deputy),
George W Bush's
younger brother Jeb and Lewis
Libby (Cheney's
chief of staff). The document,
entitled Rebuilding
America's Defences: Strategies,
Forces And
Resources For A New Century,
was written
in September 2000 by the neo-conservative
think-tank Project for the New
American Century
(PNAC).
The plan shows Bush's cabinet
intended to
take military control of the
Gulf region
whether or not Saddam Hussein
was in power.
It says: 'The United States has
for decades
sought to play a more permanent
role in Gulf
regional security. While the
unresolved conflict
with Iraq provides the immediate
justification,
the need for a substantial American
force
presence in the Gulf transcends
the issue
of the regime of Saddam Hussein.'
The PNAC document supports a
'blueprint for
maintaining global US pre-eminence,
precluding
the rise of a great power rival,
and shaping
the international security order
in line
with American principles and
interests'.
This 'American grand strategy'
must be advanced
for 'as far into the future as
possible',
the report says. It also calls
for the US
to 'fight and decisively win
multiple, simultaneous
major theatre wars' as a 'core
mission'.
The report describes American
armed forces
abroad as 'the cavalry on the new American frontier'. The PNAC blueprint supports an earlier
document written by Wolfowitz
and Libby that
said the US must 'discourage
advanced industrial
nations from challenging our
leadership or
even aspiring to a larger regional
or global
role'.
The PNAC report also:
l refers to key allies such as
the UK as
'the most effective and efficient
means of
exercising American global leadership';
l describes peace-keeping missions
as 'demanding
American political leadership
rather than
that of the United Nations';
l reveals worries in the administration
that
Europe could rival the USA;
l says 'even should Saddam pass
from the
scene' bases in Saudi Arabia
and Kuwait will
remain permanently -- despite
domestic opposition
in the Gulf regimes to the stationing
of
US troops -- as 'Iran may well
prove as large
a threat to US interests as Iraq
has';
l spotlights China for 'regime
change' saying
'it is time to increase the presence
of American
forces in southeast Asia'. This,
it says,
may lead to 'American and allied
power providing
the spur to the process of democratisation
in China';
l calls for the creation of 'US
Space Forces',
to dominate space, and the total
control
of cyberspace to prevent 'enemies'
using
the internet against the US;
l hints that, despite threatening
war against
Iraq for developing weapons of
mass destruction,
the US may consider developing
biological
weapons -- which the nation has
banned --
in decades to come. It says:
'New methods
of attack -- electronic, 'non-lethal',
biological
-- will be more widely available
... combat
likely will take place in new
dimensions,
in space, cyberspace, and perhaps
the world
of microbes ... advanced forms
of biological
warfare that can 'target' specific
genotypes
may transform biological warfare
from the
realm of terror to a politically
useful tool';
l and pinpoints North Korea,
Libya, Syria
and Iran as dangerous regimes
and says their
existence justifies the creation
of a 'world-wide
command-and-control system'.
Tam Dalyell, the Labour MP, father
of the
House of Commons and one of the
leading rebel
voices against war with Iraq,
said: 'This
is garbage from right-wing think-tanks
stuffed
with chicken-hawks -- men who
have never
seen the horror of war but are
in love with
the idea of war. Men like Cheney,
who were
draft-dodgers in the Vietnam
war.
'This is a blueprint for US world
domination
-- a new world order of their
making. These
are the thought processes of
fantasist Americans
who want to control the world.
I am appalled
that a British Labour Prime Minister
should
have got into bed with a crew
which has this
moral standing.'
the thought processes of fantasist Americans
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