caveat fetzer.

http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_jim_fetz_070830_scholars_endore__22the.htm

      August 30, 2007 at 14:44:36

      Scholars endorse "The Kennebunkport Warning": Report ominous signs of a 
privatized takeover of the nation

      by Jim Fetzer     Page 1 of 1 page(s) 

      http://www.opednews.com
        

A warning about the prospect of an imminent but staged "9/11" attack followed 
by a strike on Iran and imposition of martial law in the US has been issued by 
Cynthia McKinney, Webster Tarpley and others. Known as "The Kennebunkport 
Warning" (August 26, 2007), it has drawn support from Scholars for 9/11 Truth. 
According to its founder, James H. Fetzer, not only are there multiple 
indications the United States is about to attack Iran, but a series of rather 
odd events suggest that martial law may be near at hand. "The threat is not 
from our own military, the strength of which is being depleted by the ongoing 
occupation of Iraq, but from privatized armies, such as Blackwater USA, which 
appear to be growing stronger as the US Army is growing weaker." 

According to The Kennebunkport Warning, extensive evidence suggests that those 
allied with the neo-con faction headed by Vice President Cheney "are determined 
to orchestrate and manufacture a new 9/11 terror incident . . . (to) be used as 
a pretext for launching an aggressive war against Iran and for imposing a 
regime of martial law here in the United States. . . . We solemnly warn the 
people of the world that any terrorist attack with weapons of mass destruction 
taking place inside the United States or elsewhere in the immediate future must 
be considered the prima facie responsibility of the Cheney faction."


Fetzer, a former Marine Corps officer, observes that the privatization of 
military force has created a new problem for the citizens of this nation. "In 
the past, we have had confidence that the US military, our national guard, our 
local police and armed citizens had the combined ability to withstand threats 
to our liberty from our own government. But our military is broken, the 
National Guard has been placed under the President's control, and our access to 
ammunition now appears to be being cut off, which compromises our capacity to 
resist tyranny."

That our level of engagement in Iraq cannot be continued has been conveyed by 
many sources. Associated Press reporter Lolita C. Baldor (August 19, 2007) has 
written that our level of engagement in Iraq cannot be sustained. "Sapped by 
nearly six years of war, the Army has nearly exhausted its fighting force and 
its options if the Bush administration decides to extend the Iraq buildup 
beyond next year." Many general officers and National Guard commanders have 
said similar things, but the effects of a depleted military may have unexpected 
ramifications.

The control of the National Guard has been placed directly at the disposal of 
the President of the United States over the opposition of all fifty governors. 
"I can't imagine a more blatant violation of states' rights than this," Fetzer 
said. "It used to be the case that the Republican Party stood for states' 
rights. But then it also stood for balanced budgets, Constitutional government, 
a non-interventionist foreign policy, and keeping the government out of our 
personal lives. I simply do not understand why any principled Republican would 
support this administration. Maybe there aren't any left." 

An article by Reuters (August 26, 2007) confirms that the US is the most 
heavily armed nation in the world, with 90 guns per 100 people. According a 
Small Arms Survey conducted by the Graduate Institute of International Studies 
in Geneva, each year about 4.5 million of some 8 million new rifles, shotguns 
and hardguns are sold to US citizens, who own about 270 million of the world's 
875 million known firearms. "Ordinarily, I would consider this to be a source 
of security," Fetzer observed, "but the Second Amendment is meaningless if our 
access to ammunition is cut off."

Fetzer was recently startled to read in The Capital Times (August 28, 2007) 
that police departments across the country are so starved for ammunition that 
they are resorting to target practice with paint-ball guns. "This is quite 
shocking," he said. "Most police ammunition is .38 and 9mm caliber, not the 
kind that our military requires. The profit margin on the sale and manufacture 
of bullets is so great and the demand is so strong that it is difficult to 
imagine how this could happen absent a deliberate policy to curtail access to 
ammo. Without bullets, those vast stocks of weapons are useless. This appears 
to be a very clever, insidious plan."

Other developments raise Fetzer's concern, including a report (wesh.com, August 
22, 2007) that members of the 1st Battalion, 265th Air Defense Artillery are 
being deployed from Florida to the nation's capital for a year's duty, "where 
they will operate high-tech weapons systems against any potential air threat." 
He finds that strange. "I am not aware of any threat from the sky to the White 
House," Fetzer said. "Is this to protect Bush and Cheney from foreign 
terrorists or are they concerned that US citizens may rise up in opposition to 
their suspension of the Constitution?"

And a disturbing report has just appeared on the internet 
(nworeport.com/blackwater.htm) that Blackwater, USA, the private security 
contractor that has assembled a large mercenary force in Iraq (as part of a 
governmental privatization scheme to keep the official count of American forces 
involved artificially low) is now building its own air force in the United 
States, including the purchase of Super Tucano light combat aircraft from 
Embraer, a Brazilian company. According to the article, it has one new private 
military base in San Diego, another in Mount Carroll, IL, and has applied for 
operating licenses in every coastal U.S. state.

"If you believe in coincidence," Fetzer said, "then perhaps you consider it to 
be a remarkable improbability that, just as the American military is being 
weakened in Iraq, the National Guard is being placed under the President's 
direct control, and that ammunition is being cut off from police departments 
and armed citizens, while air defense units are being deployed to Washington, 
D.C., and mercenaries are developing their own air force. I'm not so sure. If 
we have the most capable air force in the world, then why is this one needed? 
To do things our own air force would not do? All of these developments are 
troubling and lead me to think that the Kennebunkport Warning may be even 
better founded than its signers realize." 




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