July 25, 2013
| Max Blumenthal
Seated on a stool before an audience packed with spooks, lawmakers,
lawyers and mercenaries, CNN’s Wolf Blitzer introduced recently retired
CENTCOM chief General James Mattis. “I’ve worked with him and I’ve
worked with his predecessors,” Blitzer said of Mattis. “I know how hard
it is to run an operation like this.” Reminding the crowd that
CENTCOM is “really, really important,” Blitzer urged them to celebrate
Mattis: “Let’s give the general a round of applause.”
Following the gales of cheering that resounded from the room, Mattis, the gruff 40-year Marine veteran who once volunteered his opinion
that “it’s fun to shoot some people,” outlined the challenge ahead. The
“war on terror” that began on 9/11 has no discernable end, he said,
likening it to the “the constant skirmishing between [the US cavalry]
and the Indians” during the genocidal Indian Wars of the 19th century.
“The skirmishing will go on likely for a generation,” Mattis declared.
Mattis’
remarks, made beside a cable news personality who acted more like a
sidekick than a journalist, set the tone for the entire 2013 Aspen
Security Forum this July. A project of the Aspen Institute, the Security
Forum brought together the key figures behind America’s vast national
security state, from military chieftains like Mattis to embattled
National Security Agency Chief General Keith Alexander to top FBI and
CIA officials, along with the bookish functionaries attempting to
establish legal groundwork for expanding the war on terror.
Partisan
lines and ideological disagreements faded away inside the darkened
conference hall, as a parade of American securitocrats from
administrations both past and present appeared on stage to defend
endless global warfare and total information awareness while uniting in a
single voice of condemnation against a single whistleblower bunkered
inside the waiting room of Moscow International Airport: Edward Snowden.
(snip)
Another
forum sponsor was Academi, the private mercenary corporation formerly
known as Blackwater. In fact, Academi is Blackwater’s third incarnation
(it was first renamed “Xe”) since revelations of widespread human rights
abuses and possible war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan threw the
mercenary firm into full damage control mode. The Aspen Institute did
not respond to my questions about whether accepting sponsorship from
such an unsavory entity fit within its ethical guidelines.
'Exterminating People'
John
Ashcroft, the former Attorney General who prosecuted the war on terror
under the administration of George W. Bush, appeared at Aspen as a board
member of Academi. Responding to a question about U.S. over-reliance on
the “kinetic” approach of drone strikes and special forces, Ashcroft
reminded the audience that the U.S. also likes to torture terror
suspects, not just “exterminate” them.
“It's not true that we have
relied solely on the kinetic option,” Ashcroft insisted. “We wouldn't
have so many detainees if we'd relied on the ability to exterminate
people…We've had a blended and nuanced approach and for the guy who's on
the other end of a Hellfire missile he doesn't see that as a nuance.”
Hearty
laughs erupted from the crowd and fellow panelists. With a broad smile
on her face, moderator Catherine Herridge of Fox News joked to Ashcroft,
“You have a way with words.”
But Ashcroft was not done. He
proceeded to boast about the pain inflicted on detainees during long CIA
torture sessions: “And maybe there are people who wish they were on the
end of one of those missiles.”
Competing with Ashcroft for the
High Authoritarian prize was former NSA chief Michael Hayden, who
emphasized the importance of Obama’s drone assassinations, at least in
countries the U.S. has deemed to be Al Qaeda havens. “Here's the
strategic question,” Hayden said. “People in Pakistan? I think that's
very clear. Kill 'em. People in Yemen? The same. Kill 'em.”
Evil does not do justice to these freaks.
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