8/4/06 "The Charles Goyette Show" 6 - 9 AM
KFNX 1100 AM RADIO
INTERVIEW: JAMES BAMFORD ...Iran: The Next War
AUDIO:
http://www.apfn.net/pogo/A006I060804DD.MP3
Iran: The Next War
Even before the bombs fell on Baghdad, a group of senior
Pentagon officials were plotting to invade another country.
Their covert campaign once again relied on false
intelligence and shady allies. But this time, the target was
Iran. BY JAMES BAMFORD
JAMES BAMFORD
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/10962352/iran_the_next_war
Iran: The Next War
Rolling Stone - Jul 26, 2006
... Ritz and joined two other Americans who were also
looking for ways to push the US into a war with Iran. ...
Seated next to Rosen was AIPAC's Iran expert
MORE:
How did the Bush administration sell the Iraq war? Check out
our award-winning story on the PR machine for regime change
in Iraq -- and join a reader debate: Is war with Iran
unavoidable?
I. The Israeli Connection
A few blocks off Pennsylvania Avenue, the FBI's eight-story
Washington field office exudes all the charm of a
maximum-security prison. Its curved roof is made of thick
stainless steel, the bottom three floors are wrapped in
granite and limestone, hydraulic bollards protect the ramp
to the four-floor garage, and bulletproof security booths
guard the entrance to the narrow lobby. On the fourth floor,
like a tomb within a tomb, lies the most secret room in the
$100 million concrete fortress—out-of-bounds even for
special agents without an escort. Here, in the Language
Services Section, hundreds of linguists in padded earphones
sit elbow-to-elbow in long rows, tapping computer keyboards
as they eavesdrop on the phone lines of foreign embassies
and other high-priority targets in the nation's capital.
At the far end of that room, on the morning of February
12th, 2003, a small group of eavesdroppers were listening
intently for evidence of a treacherous crime. At the very
moment that American forces were massing for an invasion of
Iraq, there were indications that a rogue group of senior
Pentagon officials were already conspiring to push the
United States into another war—this time with Iran.
A few miles away, FBI agents watched as Larry Franklin, an
Iran expert and career employee of the Defense Intelligence
Agency, drove up to the Ritz-Carlton hotel across the
Potomac from Washington. A trim man of fifty-six, with a
tangle of blond hair speckled gray, Franklin had left his
modest home in Kearneysville, West Virginia, shortly before
dawn that morning to make the eighty-mile commute to his job
at the Pentagon. Since 2002, he had been working in the
Office of Special Plans, a crowded warren of blue cubicles
on the building's fifth floor. A secretive unit responsible
for long-term planning and propaganda for the invasion of
Iraq, the office's staffers referred to themselves as "the
cabal." They reported to Douglas Feith, the
third-most-powerful official in the Defense Department,
helping to concoct the fraudulent intelligence reports that
were driving America to war in Iraq.
Just two weeks before, in his State of the Union address,
President Bush had begun laying the groundwork for the
invasion, falsely claiming that Saddam Hussein had the means
to produce tens of thousands of biological and chemical
weapons, including anthrax, botulinum toxin, sarin, mustard
and VX nerve agent. But an attack on Iraq would require
something that alarmed Franklin and other neoconservatives
almost as much as weapons of mass destruction: detente with
Iran. As political columnist David Broder reported in The
Washington Post, moderates in the Bush administration were
"covertly negotiating for Iran to stay quiet and offer help
to refugees when we go into Iraq."
Franklin—a devout neoconservative who had been brought into
Feith's office because of his political beliefs—was hoping
to undermine those talks. As FBI agents looked on, Franklin
entered the restaurant at the Ritz and joined two other
Americans who were also looking for ways to push the U.S.
into a war with Iran. One was Steven Rosen, one of the most
influential lobbyists in Washington. Sixty years old and
nearly bald, with dark eyebrows and a seemingly permanent
frown, Rosen was director of foreign-policy issues at
Israel's powerful lobby, the American Israel Public Affairs
Committee. Seated next to Rosen was AIPAC's Iran expert,
Keith Weissman. He and Rosen had been working together
closely for a decade to pressure U.S. officials and members
of Congress to turn up the heat on Tehran.
Over breakfast at the Ritz-Carlton, Franklin told the two
lobbyists about a draft of a top-secret National Security
Presidential Directive that dealt with U.S. policy on Iran.
Crafted by Michael Rubin, the desk officer for Iraq and Iran
in Feith's office, the document called, in essence, for
regime change in Iran. In the Pentagon's view, according to
one senior official there at the time, Iran was nothing but
"a house of cards ready to be pushed over the precipice." So
far, though, the White House had rejected the Pentagon's
plan, favoring the State Department's more moderate position
of diplomacy. Now, unwilling to play by the rules any
longer, Franklin was taking the extraordinary—and
illegal—step of passing on highly classified information to
lobbyists for a foreign state. Unable to win the internal
battle over Iran being waged within the administration, a
member of Feith's secret unit in the Pentagon was
effectively resorting to treason, recruiting AIPAC to use
its enormous influence to pressure the president into
adopting the draft directive and wage war against Iran.
It was a role that AIPAC was eager to play. Rosen,
recognizing that Franklin could serve as a useful spy,
immediately began plotting ways to plant him in the White
House—specifically in the National Security Council, the
epicenter of intelligence and national-security policy. By
working there, Rosen told Franklin a few days later, he
would be "by the elbow of the president."
Knowing that such a maneuver was well within AIPAC's
capabilities, Franklin asked Rosen to "put in a good word"
for him. Rosen agreed. "I'll do what I can," he said, adding
that the breakfast meeting had been a real "eye-opener."
Working together, the two men hoped to sell the United
States on yet another bloody war. A few miles away, digital
recorders at the FBI's Language Services Section captured
every word.
Continue to The Guru and the Exile
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http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/10962352/iran_the_next_war/2
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