Untitled Document
The head of a dangerous ultra-conservative Washington think tank is now going
public to defend the neo-con’s perverted war strategy, taking his “dog
and pony show” on the road Tuesday where he will be speaking at the University
of Wisconsin-Milwaukee campus.
Dr. Gary Schmitt, executive director of the Project for a New American Century
(PNAC), the Nazi/neo-con radical rightwing group that called for a “New
Pearl Harbor” in September 2000, is stepping-up the Bush administration’s
propaganda pitch to justify the spread of global war and terror.
But local citizens and students are trying to stop the neo-con propaganda
message in its tracks by threatening to perform a citizen’s arrest on
Schmitt, calling him a traitor and “the real leader of the terrorist organization
within our government” that planned the 9/11 attacks, killing 3,000 Americans
in the process.
“In it’s document ‘Rebuilding America’s Defenses’
of September 2000, PNAC called for a massive military budget increases, a policy
of pre-emptive war, including using Saddam Hussein as an excuse to invade the
Iraqi oil fields and stepped up intervention around the world,” said a
spokesman for “Flush Pee-NAC,” the local Wisconsin group threatening
to arrest Schmitt before the speech.
“But PNAC also noted that these goals would be extremely difficult
to accomplish absent some galvanizing event like a new Pearl Harbor which occurred
on 9/11.”
Although millions in America now view the Iraqi war as a mistake and Al Qaeda
as a Bush-neo-con myth created to instill fear, Schmitt is still trying to convince
Americans of the administration’s “good intentions” in the
face of dwindling support for the war and other Bush policies, both home and
abroad.
Besides Schmitt, others behind PNAC’s global war strategy, bent on destroying
the United States, include Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld, Presidential Advisor Richard Perle and World Bank President
Paul Wolfowitz.
And immediately after Bush and his gang took power in January 2000 it is well-documented
they were immediately overly zealous and committed to the invasion of Iraq,
an invasion that would have been politically possible to pull-off without 9/11,
occurring only eight months later.
A Wisconsin ‘Flush Pee-NAC’ spokesman gave further credibility
to the administration’s involvement in bringing about 9/11 and orchestrating
a global war on terror, adding:
“According to former Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill, the Bush
administration was so obsessed with its planned Iraq invasion from the moment
it took power that they had no time for other issues. Then in July, 2001, after
the Taliban pipeline deal fell through, they committed to invading Afghanistan
in the fall, also impossible without 9/11.”
Even though the Bush still plays the terror card justifying his illegal
war, prominent Americans from all walks of live, both conservative and liberal,
are now calling 9/11 an inside government, citing numerous inconsistencies in
the official story making it impossible to believe.
Some of the more glaring inconsistencies with the government story
include NORAD’s stand down of air defenses, the likely controlled demolition
of the WTC and Building No. 7, the fact at least seven of the 19 named so-called
Arab hijackers are still alive, the likelihood of a missile or a military jet,
not a commercial airliner, striking the Pentagon, the myth surrounding the “let’s
roll” passenger scenario on Flight 93 and the strange actions by President
Bush on the morning of 9/11.
Some of those prominent Americans who disbelieve the government’s
official 9/11 story, calling it an inside job, include former Republican cabinet
members Catherine Austin Fitts, Morgan Reynolds and Paul Craig Roberts. Others
include writer Gore Vidal, noted theologian David Ray Griffin as well as David
Cobb, Rabbi Machael Lerner, CIA analyst Ray McGovern, Howard Zinn, Jim Hightower,
Rep. Cynthia McKinney, British ex-Environmental Minister Michael Meecher and
the later Sen. Paul Wellstone.
Schmitt, a well-known neo-con mouthpiece, will also be speaking on the Ben
Merens Show on Wisconsin Public Radio at 3pm Tuesday before giving his evening
speech at the university.
Although much criticism is expected, Schmitt intends to rally support for Bush’s
low nationwide approval ratings in what many critics see as a last ditch effort
to sell the administration’s failed policies to a disbelieving public.