-Caveat Lector-

>From Boston Globe

US to send 82 more warplanes

Reserves facing call-up to stop 'ethnic cleansing,' Pentagon says for first
time

By Mary Leonard and Anne E. Kornblut, Globe Staff, 04/11/99

WASHINGTON - Heeding warnings that an even ''greater humanitarian disaster''
loomed for hundreds of thousands of ethnic Albanians trapped in Kosovo than
for the more than half million who have fled the province in the past 18
days, the Pentagon announced yesterday that 82 more US warplanes were
joining NATO's air campaign to crush Yugoslav forces.

The Pentagon also, for the first time, said US reservists may be called up
in the campaign to stop Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic's ''ethnic
cleansing'' - a term coined by Serbs to describe the forced removal of
another ethnic group.

The plight of ethnic Albanians hiding in the mountains and forests of Kosovo
is ''a bigger problem than the refugees here,'' said Ilaz Ramajli, a Kosovo
official in Albania. ''The refugees here arrived and do not have to fear for
their lives. They are not being attacked.''

Ramajli, an aide to ethnic Albanian leader Ibrahim Rugova, pleaded for NATO
to airdrop food and medical aid to the Albanian Kosovars, who have been
driven from their homes in the last two weeks by Serb police and
paramilitary units.

US officials estimate that up to 750,000 ethnic Albanians are displaced
inside Kosovo, many in hiding, without food or adequate clothing, and some
the victims of atrocities. ''They aren't living in luxury, and they aren't
being treated very nicely,'' Major General Charles Wald said at the
Pentagon.

At NATO headquarters in Brussels, spokesman Jamie Shea said the alliance was
''very concerned'' but had no ''miracle solution'' for reaching the
endangered Kosovar Albanians, many of whom were pushed back into the country
after Yugoslavia closed Kosovo's borders Wednesday.

The US response is not an airdrop over Kosovo - up to now such low-altitude
air missions have been considered too risky for alliance pilots. Instead,
the Pentagon is adding the 82 fighters, tankers, and transports to the 400
aircraft it has already committed to NATO to intensify the air war over
Yugoslavia and its Serbian province, Kosovo.

''The addition of these aircraft will ... expand the number of strikes over
any 24-hour period and give us more deep-strike capacity,'' said Pentagon
spokesman Kenneth H. Bacon, adding that he expected other NATO allies to
enhance their forces in a matter of days, too.

''Basically, it will allow us to increase the intensity of the air campaign
over Kosovo and Yugoslavia,'' Bacon said.

The aircraft, which were requested by the NATO commander, General Wesley K.
Clark, and will join some 200 other allied warplanes in the force, include
24 F-16 fighters armed with HARM antiradar missiles; 4 tank-killing A-10
Thunderbolt attack aircraft; 6 radar-jamming EA-6B Prowlers; 39 KC-135s and
2 KC-10s, both refueling tanker aircraft; and 7 C-130 transports. The
Pentagon has promised 24 Apache helicopter gunships, but Wald said yesterday
it could take a month for them all to be in operation.

Bacon also said the expanding air campaign could require the call-up of
reserve military personnel. So far, enough reserve tanker pilots have
volunteered to fly support missions, ''but if we reach a point where we
exhaust the volunteer pool, then we probably would have to seek a reservist
call-up for pilots,'' Bacon said.

Because certain other military specialties exist only in the reserves, Bacon
said ''it's conceivable'' there would have to be additional calls on
reservists.

Even with signs that NATO was widening the war, cloudy weather hampered its
operations Friday night. Three out of four air missions were canceled, said
Colonel Konrad Freytag, a NATO spokesman, though cruise missiles were fired
from British and US ships.

Freytag confirmed that a NATO bomb struck a radio-relay tower at Golec, near
the Kosovo capital of Pristina. ''It was used mainly for military purposes,
that's why we took it out,'' Freytag said, responding to complaints from
Belgrade that the bombing knocked out Serbian TV broadcasts in Kosovo.

Pentagon officials said they would not verify reports out of Yugoslavia that
NATO bombs fell on the airport at Slatina, south of Pristina, yesterday.
Explosions also were heard at a military airport in the capital of the
Yugoslav republic of Montenegro.

As air-raid sirens sounded in Belgrade and civilians stood as human shields
on Danube bridges, the official news agency Tanjug said: ''NATO barbarians
are attempting to bomb us just a few hours before the Orthodox Easter
celebrations.''

NATO officials said the air campaign was having an effect. ''In the last two
weeks we have inflicted a hell of a lot of damage, quite frankly, on the
Yugoslav armed forces,'' said Shea, the spokesman. He estimated that half of
the Serbs' MiG-29 aircraft had been destroyed, as had two of its three major
Army headquarters, 50 percent of its fuel stocks, ''a lot'' of vehicles, and
key elements of Yugoslav command, control, and communications.

Still, members of Congress from both parties who accompanied Defense
Secretary William S. Cohen to Brussels last week said they don't believe a
sustained air campaign would remove Serb forces from Kosovo.

''While our focus is on accomplishing the current mission of significantly
degrading Milosevic's military capability through an intense air campaign,
we believe it is prudent for the US to urge NATO to plan for additional
military missions, including the use of ground forces,'' the nine senators
and representatives wrote in a letter to Clinton.

This week, the president faces a domestic debate over the military operation
in Yugoslavia when Congress returns from a two-week recess. He is scheduled
to meet with groups of senators and representatives tomorrow and Tuesday to
explain the policy and progress.

In a Republican radio address yesterday, Representative Heather Wilson of
New Mexico said US policy ''has failed to achieve our political objectives
and accelerated the humanitarian disaster in the Balkans.

''The president owes us an explanation of what, exactly, `winning' would
mean, and what the costs would be, in dollars, yes, but mostly in lives lost
and dreams destroyed,'' said Wilson, a former Air Force officer.

Yesterday, the White House remained steadfast against introducing ground
troops. The president believes ''we can achieve our objectives through the
phased air campaign,'' National Security Council spokesman David Leavy said.

But what Ramajli, the ethnic Albanian leader, called the ''greater
humanitarian disaster'' - starvation on the ground in Kosovo - complicates
NATO's plans for a sustained air campaign. As NATO officials weighed
Yugoslavia's motives in reopening Kosovo's borders with Albania and
Macedonia, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees announced yesterday the
number of ethnic Albanian refugees who had left Kosovo reached 521,000 - and
thousands more were streaming into Albania early today.

At Morina Pass on the Albanian-Kosovo border, many of the new arrivals said
that Serb troops tried to enlist them into their force - and then pushed
them out of their homes when they refused.

''It is very possible that there will be a humanitarian catastrophe in the
forests,'' Ramajli said. ''The situation is very, very bad, especially for
ill people and old people. We had a practice in Bosnia with NATO countries
to drop humanitarian aid and medical aid. I hope the countries will do the
same here.''

Asked if food drops would lure Serb troops, he responded that that danger
''always exists.''

Kornblut reported from Albania and Leonard from Washington. Material from
wire services was also included.


This story ran on page A01 of the Boston Globe on 04/11/99.
� Copyright 1999 Globe Newspaper Company.


>From The New American
http://www.jbs.org/tna/1999/03-29-99/admirals_sound_alarm.htm

Admirals Sound the Alarm

 Admiral Thomas H. Moorer, who has served America as Commander in Chief of
the Pacific Fleet, Commander in Chief of the Atlantic Fleet, Chief of Naval
Operations, and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is a genuine American
legend. As a young lieutenant commander at Pearl Harbor, Moorer was the only
aviator able to scramble his plane, a PBY "flying boat," after the Japanese
attack. He and his crew, who were then the sole eyes and ears of the U.S.
forces at Pearl Harbor, flew for 17 hours in search of the Japanese fleet
and provided intelligence to U.S. commanders. Admiral Moorer serves as
honorary chairman of U.S. Defense-American Victory, a private educational
group dedicated to America's defense and national security.

Rear Admiral C. A. "Mark" Hill began his naval career in World War II as a
lieutenant on the U.S.S. Ray, one of the most decorated submarines of the
war. From the submarine fleet he went into naval aviation, piloting both
propeller and jet attack aircraft. During the Vietnam War he commanded the
aircraft carrier Independence. Later he served as Assistant Chief of Naval
Operations and as the Navy's diplomatic representative to Brazil. He is the
government affairs representative for the Naval Aviation Foundation and
chairman of U.S. Defense-American Victory.

Admirals Moorer and Hill were interviewed by senior editor William F. Jasper
at the Army-Navy Club in Washington, DC on February 10th, as the U.S. Senate
began final deliberations in the impeachment trial of President Clinton.

Q. Both of you gentlemen have been quite vocal in the past year on a wide
variety of issues concerning America's defense and national security. But I
would like to start with the Panama Canal, since, in a matter of ten months,
under the fraudulent 1978 Carter treaties, we are scheduled to turn over the
Canal Zone to Panama. Aren't there a number of very serious concerns
involved with this matter that are being ignored by the Clinton
Administration, Congress, and the media?
Adm. Moorer. Yes, one of the issues which we have been addressing lately
that has been completely ignored by just about everybody is the fact that
the Red Chinese are poised to effectively take control of the Panama Canal.
As your magazine pointed out very well in your issue on Chinagate, the
Clinton Administration, in numerous ways, has been helping China build its
military forces into a formidable, modern threat that can challenge our
interests around the world. But the Panama Canal is very close to home and
is one of our most vital commercial and military assets.

In 1996, while China was illegally pouring millions of dollars into Clinton'
s re-election effort, it was also funneling huge amounts of cash to
Panamanian politicians to ensure that one of its front companies, Hutchison
Whampoa of Hong Kong, could move in when we vacate. In 1997, Panama secretly
turned over the American-built port facility at Balboa, which controls
shipping on the Pacific side, and at Cristobal, which controls shipping on
the Atlantic side, to Hutchison. Over the next several months we are
scheduled to turn over Rodman Naval Station, Howard Air Force Base, and
other important military facilities to Panama, which has given Hutchison an
option on these bases.

This means that very soon we could see Communist China in control of one of
the world's most strategic waterways in our own backyard. President Clinton
may say that they are our friends and allies, but the Chinese military and
Communist Party literature refer to the United States as "the main enemy."
And despite what President Clinton, Henry Kissinger, and the media may tell
you about "reform" in China, it is still run by a brutal, totalitarian,
Communist regime that will do us harm if and when it thinks it can get the
better of us.

Q. Yet almost no one, it seems, is aware of these developments in Panama and
the impending transfer.

Adm. Hill. Let me give you a striking illustration of the near-total
ignorance of this vital matter by otherwise well-informed leaders. I'm a
director of a New York corporation, and I was up there two weeks ago for our
annual meeting. At a breakfast before the meeting, I was sitting at a table
with a dozen other directors when the chairman of our company asked me what
I was working on currently. I told him I was working on this business of
stopping the Red Chinese from taking over the Panama Canal in the year 2000.
He said, "What?!" - very surprised. "How are they going to do that?" he
asked. I said, "It's something called Panama Law No. 5." He turned to the
other directors, who are all successful businessmen and generally
well-informed Americans, and asked, "Have any of you gentleman heard
anything about this?" Not a single one of them had, and all were shocked and
disturbed to find out what is happening.

Q. The only time it seems to rate mention is when some politician or
commentator is dismissing the importance of the Panama Canal to the United
States.

Adm. Moorer. It is astounding to me that reputedly intelligent politicians
and supposed military experts are still able to get away with the perennial
false arguments that have been so resoundingly refuted about the Panama
Canal being obsolete and of no strategic value. That is simply not true.
About 95 percent of our routine logistic support goes by sea, and most of
that can transit the Canal. It saves about 13,000 miles and a couple weeks
in time as compared to sailing around the Cape.

Adm. Hill. Admiral Moorer and I both testified before the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee on June 16th, and, if you look at that testimony, you
will see that it was followed up with a rebuttal by U.S. Ambassador to
Panama William Hughes, the former New Jersey Democratic congressman.
Ambassador Hughes, arguing for the Administration, offered all of the
standard clich�s and fallacies about the canal. We then provided a 21-page,
point-by-point refutation of Mr. Hughes' rebuttal by Admiral Moorer and
William Bright Marine, a businessman and Panamanian presidential candidate.
The son of an American father and a Panamanian mother, Mr. Marine is a
U.S.-Panamanian dual citizen. He was imprisoned and tortured by Manuel
Noriega and has firsthand knowledge of Panama's importance as a narcotics
thoroughfare. This combination testimony by Admiral Moorer and Mr. Marine is
very important because it specifically and factually refutes all of these
false arguments that are constantly raised to justify our abandonment of the
Canal.

Q. You wrote the foreword, Admiral Moorer, to Death Knell of the Panama
Canal?, the recent book by Commander G. Russell Evans, which is an excellent
and timely source on this subject. But what can be done to avert this
looming disaster?

Adm. Moorer. Our organization, U.S. Defense-American Victory, is working to
stop the Panama Canal transfer and render the treaties null and void. As you
know, there was a great deal of skullduggery involved, both by the Carter
State Department and the Torrijos regime in Panama, which involved, among
other things, the ratification of very different and contradictory treaties
by Panama and the United States. In fact, Panama never ratified its treaty
as required by the Panamanian Constitution. President Lacas assured me he
never signed it, and it was not submitted to the Panamanian people for a
plebiscite vote, as required. It was illegally strong-armed through by Omar
Torrijos.

Many members of Congress know this but have not had the courage or integrity
to challenge what is obviously a longstanding and dangerous fraud. We intend
to mobilize a great many Americans to hold Congress and the Administration
to account. As Admiral Hill pointed out with his anecdote about the
directors breakfast, most people are completely in the dark about this, but
once they learn of it they are appalled and demand that something be done.
We are trying to inform and mobilize Americans to take concerted action to
motivate Congress. The Canal giveaway is not a completely "done deal" - yet.

It is important to look at the Panama Canal situation in terms of China's
overall maritime strategy. China is working on the Malacca Straits down by
Singapore. They have a station at the island of Tarawa and are establishing
themselves throughout the Pacific. They've put an 8,000-foot runway on the
Paracel Islands and are establishing a base on the Spratly Islands (between
Singapore and the Philippines), which they are aggressively making claims on
in spite of the Philippines' claims to the islands. The United States was
stupid enough to give up our Subic Bay Naval Base, which the Chinese also
tried to get. Fortunately, the Philippine military was savvy enough to turn
them down.

Adm. Hill. When we speak of a maritime strategy for the United States, too
often people think there is a certain parochialism involved on the part of
the Navy. But a maritime strategy is really a logistic strategy for our
forward deployed forces. We are, in a sense, an island nation, and we cannot
support our forward deployed forces without having control of the sea lanes.
It is not just a matter of being able to do something with our fighting
forces - the Army, Air Force, Navy, or Marines - it's a fact that none of
these forces can do anything if they don't have the logistics.

Q. Americans, unfortunately, are woefully ignorant of world geography in
general and of geo-strategic maritime choke points in particular. Why is an
appreciation of this so vitally important?

Adm. Moorer. Admiral Hill put his finger on the key word: logistics, the
critical factor in any military operation. You cannot unload a division of
troops ashore without having a steady stream of food, ammunition, uniforms,
fuel, medical supplies, etc. The Air Force, for example, has the bulky
problem of fuel - massive quantities of fuel - if it is going to have
sustained operations. The fuel demand is tremendous when you have bombers,
fighters, transports, and helicopters. You can't fly fuel into a foreign
base in adequate amounts to fulfill their requirements. When you talk about
moving logistic support by airlift you're talking about ounces; when you
talk about logistic support that actually takes place with ships, you're
dealing in tons. That's why the flexibility of movement of the maritime
forces from ocean to ocean has been vital to the success of our strategy.
And that's why it is vital to our survival to recognize when a hostile
nation maneuvers to gain strategic dominance of these sea lanes. Unlike most
other countries, we haven't been invaded and destroyed, and haven't had
full-scale combat here on our own soil for over 100 years. One reason for
this is that we are a maritime power.

Adm. Hill. There are many examples that illustrate the vital nature of
logistics. One excellent example goes back to the Carter Administration,
during the oil crisis, when we needed to get a carrier group to the Persian
Gulf area. At the time the Midway was stationed at Yokosuka, Japan. The
easiest, quickest solution would have been to send the Midway. But Japan was
totally dependent on Middle East oil. It's never really come out, but the
Japanese told us through diplomatic channels that we couldn't use the Midway
because the OPEC producers might retaliate and cut Japan's energy lifeline.
We had to send the Coral Sea carrier group from our West Coast, which was
much more time-consuming and costly. It took every oiler we had in the
Pacific fleet to get her there.

Another important point: We have never maintained our forces in any area for
a substantial period of time in action more than 500 to 1,000 miles from a
logistics stock point. We couldn't have maintained our forces in Vietnam
without Subic Bay. Politics often can come into play in many ways to deny us
use of certain of our assets, which is why we have to have flexibility and
multiple options.

Q. How do you view the escalation in the use of U.S. forces for UN-related
operations throughout the world?

Adm. Moorer. Increasingly we have been deploying U.S. forces in so-called
"peacekeeping" operations like Bosnia, Macedonia, Somalia, Haiti - and now,
today, as we're sitting here, the Administration is proposing a new
operation in Kosovo. These operations have been very costly, both in terms
of dollars taken from the budget that should go toward defending our own
country, and in terms of expended equipment and supplies that are not being
adequately replaced. Even though we have had more of these "contingency
operations" under President Clinton than under any previous Administration,
we have suffered 14 consecutive cuts in the defense budget, invalidating the
longstanding policy of our country to be able to win in two major
contingencies simultaneously. According to Representative Floyd Spence, the
distinguished chairman of the House National Security Committee, it is
doubtful that we could win even one major contingency at this point. The
U.S. Marine Corps, by its own admission, is prepared and trained to fight
one, not two, major contingencies at the present time. We are spending $2.5
billion yearly in Bosnia alone and are still heavily engaged in Iraq.

In my opinion, any deployment of forces has to be directly tied to our
national security or it is an unwise and improper use of our military
forces. We should not be using our forces to serve UN or other multilateral
objectives. If you cannot relate military deployment concretely to our
national security - that is, primarily, protecting the American people and
their property - then I don't think you have a case for deployment.

Now, the American people need to understand that sometimes protecting our
national security interests does involve foreign deployment of our forces.
The Communist attempt to take over the Dominican Republic, for instance,
justified the use of our forces. The Soviets already had a foothold in the
Caribbean, in Cuba, and were backing the insurrection in the Dominican
Republic. We quickly put together both sea-based amphibious forces and
paratroopers, and we quelled the revolution and spoiled the Soviet plans to
create a new base of operations there. I think it is important for the
public to realize that if you're serious about defending the nation you can'
t just sit and wait until the enemy, or potential enemy, gets control of all
the strategic positions and is capable of threatening our basic defense,
which is forward deployed forces. We have forces in the Mediterranean, the
Western Pacific, and elsewhere, and those have a national security purpose.

Q. You were at Pearl Harbor when the Japanese attacked. What are the
potential Pearl Harbors that we face today?

Adm. Moorer. People frequently ask me to tell them about Pearl Harbor. I
tell them I remember just one thing: Before the attack lots of people were
writing articles and making speeches claiming we were spending too much
money on defense. But as soon as the first bombs fell on Pearl the
expression on everybody's faces changed, and then the same people were
asking, "Why didn't you buy more defense?"

As far as anticipating another "Pearl Harbor" surprise attack, there are a
number of possible scenarios. With Red China in control of the Panama Canal,
for instance, we would have to face the possibility that China could launch
a missile attack just 900 miles from our shores. On a lower threat level,
but still very serious, China could deny us access to the Canal at a time
when it is very critical for us to have use of it for military action. Then
we would be faced with a whole new predicament over what action to take in
response to this denial of access. Many people are also badly mistaken by
counting Russia out of the picture as a continuing threat. That is certainly
not the case.

Adm. Hill. Russia is still a very viable threat. In fact, just yesterday the
deputy director of the CIA, General Gordon, pointed out in an unclassified
talk that the ICBMs that had been located in the periphery states of the
former Soviet Union have now gone back to Russia. So they are under Russian
control, and it is Russia that still represents the major strategic threat
to our country - whether it's Boris Yeltsin who sits as President in the
Kremlin or any number of possible replacements who may soon take his place.
Russia is still launching new submarines and bringing new weapons systems on
line. And it is providing weapons systems and technical advice to many of
our potential enemies and terrorist states, such as Iraq and Iran. Very few
people seem to take note of the revival of the Soviet-Chinese axis, which
has been underway. They've signed agreements and treaties and are
cooperating in a number of areas.

Q. This Sino-Soviet axis is of enormous significance, and yet most of our
"experts" as well as most of the American public still talk in terms of a
"Sino-Soviet Split," taking false comfort in the belief that these two
Communist powers are too much at odds with each other to combine against us.

Adm. Moorer. Yes, and Mr. Yeltsin, actually, has paid a visit to the
president of Red China, and they allegedly discussed how they could replace
the United States as the leading superpower.

Adm. Hill. Nevertheless, while all of this has been developing before our
eyes, the Clinton Administration has taken unprecedented and incredible
steps to help this Sino-Soviet axis by actively providing China with
military and technical assistance on an enormous scale. The cumulative
impact to our national security of all of these disastrous transfers is only
beginning to be felt and evaluated - and it seems that almost daily we
discover some new treacherous deal or policy that this Administration has
carried out that has seriously compromised our nation's defenses.

Adm. Moorer. Technology is our very strong asset, our edge that compensates
for the fact that Russia and China have us beat in quantity, with their vast
numbers of military personnel and equipment. It is worse than ridiculous -
it is indefensible to be giving away this technology to our adversaries as
we have been doing. President Clinton maneuvered around the law and national
security imperatives to permit the Loral and Hughes corporations to transfer
very vital missile technology and satellite information to the Red Chinese.
These and other offenses certainly border on treason, I think. We have this
Israeli spy, Jonathan Pollard, locked up, with some people saying he should
be shot, but what he did I think pales next to what Clinton has done.

Adm. Hill. Since Admiral Moorer has mentioned the Pollard case, and since
there has been a substantial campaign underway for some time to whitewash
this case and exonerate Pollard, I think it is important to mention that
Vice Admiral Dave Richardson recently sent me a two-page summary of what
four former chiefs of naval intelligence have said about the Pollard case.
According to the authoritative evaluation of these retired rear admirals,
Pollard is every bit as bad as Soviet spies John Walker or Aldrich Ames and
his espionage has seriously compromised our nation's security, regardless of
the arguments of his defenders that he only gave this information to Israel.
This is very important, but I agree with Admiral Moorer that President
Clinton's actions have been far more damaging than Pollard's.

Q. Recently I was talking with a retired Navy commander in California who
mentioned his concern over the fact that virtually all of our naval bases on
the West Coast have been shut down between San Diego and Seattle.

Adm. Hill. I guess that it is true. Mare Island is gone. Hunters Point is
gone. Alameda is gone. Long Beach is gone - and Clinton has been trying to
give it to COSCO, the Red Chinese shipping giant, which is part of China's
military, apparently in return for illegal campaign contributions to his
re-election effort.

Adm. Moorer. President Clinton boasts about "small government" and how he
supposedly has reduced the numbers of government personnel, but frankly, all
of the reductions have come at the expense of our men in uniform, not by
reducing the number of federal bureaucrats. And even today in the Washington
Post, Secretary of Defense William Cohen essentially admits that the
so-called Clinton military buildup is a fiction, a shell game of moving
dollars around to give the appearance of accomplishing something. When I was
Chief of Naval Operations we had 1,000 ships; now we're down to 350 and the
ship building plans won't even maintain that.

Adm. Hill. It has been moving down very rapidly, as ships go out of
commission, and when you have a major brand new carrier like the USS Truman
and they have to admit that they can't man it to its full complement, you
know that something is terribly wrong. And we see this in all of the
services: Retention of personnel is a major problem. The actual reason for
this is not what you usually hear: pay scale, marital separations, the need
for more leave, etc. The real cause is poor morale, and what this President
and his Administration have done to undermine the morale of our Armed
Forces.

Q. Are you encouraged that President Clinton appeared to be making a
dramatic reversal this week, announcing that he now favors some sort of
missile defense system?

Adm. Moorer. Yes and no. It is encouraging insofar as it indicates that
President Clinton recognizes that there is strong public support for a
ballistic missile defense system. Polls repeatedly show that Americans
overwhelmingly support deployment of such a system. In fact, polls show most
Americans think we already have some sort of system in place. But the fact
is, we do not; we are presently defenseless. But I have no confidence that
the President intends to deploy any system.

Q. Admiral Moorer, in your testimony before the House Judiciary Committee,
and in your letters to Representatives Henry Hyde and Tom DeLay, you have
made quite clear your opinion that President Clinton should be convicted by
the Senate and removed from office. As we sit here, it does not look like
that will happen. What significance does that have for our country?

Adm. Moorer. I am afraid that it will not bode well for our country. As you
have pointed out so well in The New American, the primary charges on which
President Clinton should have been impeached and convicted are the many
demonstrable offenses in which he has broken the law and jeopardized
national security, particularly in those matters generally known as
Chinagate. Like Admiral Hill, a man who has spent his entire life dedicated
to preserving the security of the United States, I am absolutely appalled
that this President has been able to so effectively decimate our nation's
defenses and get away with it. The President's defenders and champions
incessantly cite opinion polls as evidence that he should remain in office,
but such arguments are baseless on several counts. First, many of the polls
are suspect because the questions are devised and polling samples skewed to
obtain a preordained favorable result for Clinton. Second, most people
simply do not know a fraction of the truth about the devastating effect of
his policies. "But if the discretion of the people has not been informed,"
Thomas Jefferson said, "how can their will be determinative?" If the people
knew of all of the other falsehoods that have been engaged in, would their
opinion of Clinton be the same? I hardly think so. And third, we are a
republic governed by the Constitution and laws, not by opinion polls.

Although I find it unfathomable that the House would ignore matters like
Chinagate and restrict its inquiry solely to the perjury and obstruction
charges, I do believe that those charges are serious enough to warrant
removal of the President. More than 68 years ago I took an oath to defend
the Constitution, an oath that every member of the Armed Forces takes.
President Clinton took a similar oath. And he also took an oath when he
testified before the grand jury and swore his depositions. It is perfectly
clear that he lied in these instances and that he has repeatedly lied to and
misled the American people. During my years of military service, instilling
a concept of honor and truthfulness - precepts which are so crucial in
battle where lives are so dependent upon them - was always my first
priority. Here we see a spreading stain of dishonor which is infecting the
entire body politic. How can we expect members of our Armed Forces who may
soon be ordered into battle to abide by a rigid code of honor and truth when
their Commander in Chief is free to view such precepts with disdain?

But we cannot allow ourselves to become discouraged. We must continue our
efforts to awaken the public to these vitally important matters that concern
our country's very existence. As we have said, when moral, responsible
people find out the truth they are indeed concerned. So we must push on with
even more determination.

Back to Table of Contents



----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----

THE NEW AMERICAN - Copyright 1999, American Opinion Publishing, Incorporated


~~~~~~~~~~~~
A<>E<>R

The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
Every great advance in natural knowledge has involved
the absolute rejection of authority. -Thomas Huxley
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
Forwarded as information only; no endorsement to be presumed
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material
is distributed without charge or profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this type of information
for non-profit research and educational purposes only.

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance�not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to