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Paul Wolfowitz

Deputy Secretary of Defense

On February 5, 2001, President Bush announced  his intention to
nominate Dr. Paul Wolfowitz to be Deputy Secretary of Defense. He was
unanimously confirmed by the Senate on Feb. 28th and sworn in March
2, 2001 as the 28th Deputy Secretary of Defense. This is Dr.
Wolfowitz's third tour of duty in the Pentagon.

For the last seven years, Dr. Wolfowitz has served as Dean and
Professor of International Relations at the Paul H. Nitze School of
Advanced International Studies (SAIS) of The Johns Hopkins
University. SAIS is widely regarded as one of the world's leading
graduate schools of international relations with 750 students,
studying on campuses in Washington, D.C.; Nanjing, China; and
Bologna, Italy. As Dean, he led a successful capital campaign that
raised more than $75 million and doubled the school's endowment. Also
under his leadership, the curriculum and facilities were modernized
and new faculty and programs were added to shift the school's focus
from the Cold War to the era of globalization.

>From 1989 to 1993, Dr. Wolfowitz served as Under Secretary of Defense for Policy in 
>charge of the 700-person defense policy team that was responsible to Secretary Dick 
>Cheney for matters concerning strategy, plans, and po
licy. During this period Secretary Wolfowitz and his staff had major responsibilities 
for the reshaping of strategy and force posture at the end of the Cold War.

Under his leadership, the Policy Staff played a major role in reviewing war plans for 
the Gulf War, and developing and executing plans that successfully raised more than 
$50 billion in Allied financial support for the war
 and prevented Iraq from opening a second front with Israel. Other key initiatives 
included the development of the Regional Defense Strategy, the Base Force, and two 
presidential nuclear initiatives that led to the elimin
ation of tens of thousands of U.S. and Soviet nuclear weapons.

During the Reagan administration, Dr. Wolfowitz served for three years as U.S. 
Ambassador to Indonesia - the fourth largest country in the world and the largest in 
the Moslem world. There he earned a reputation as a highl
y popular and effective Ambassador, a tough negotiator on behalf of American 
intellectual property owners, and a public advocate of political openness and 
democratic values. During his tenure, Embassy Jakarta was cited as
 one of the four best-managed embassies inspected in 1988.

Prior to that posting, he served three and a half years as Assistant Secretary of 
State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, where he was in charge of U.S. relations 
with more than twenty countries. In addition to contribu
ting to substantial improvements in U.S. relations with Japan and China, Assistant 
Secretary Wolfowitz played a central role in coordinating the U.S. policy toward the 
Philippines that supported a peaceful transition from
 the dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos to democracy.

Dr. Wolfowitz's previous government service included:

Two years as head of the State Department's Policy Planning Staff (1981-82):
An earlier Pentagon tour as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Regional 
Programs (1977-80), where he helped create the force that later became the United 
States Central Command and initiated the Maritime Pre-positi
oning Ships, the backbone of the initial U.S. deployment twelve years later in 
Operation Desert Shield;
Four years (1973-77) in the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, working on the 
Strategic Arms Limitation Talks and a number of nuclear nonproliferation issues; and
A year as a Management Intern at the Bureau of the Budget (1966-67).

Dr. Wolfowitz taught previously at Yale (1970-73) and Johns Hopkins (1981). In 1993, 
he was the George F. Kennan Professor of National Security Strategy at the National 
War College. He has written widely on the subject of
 national strategy and foreign policy and was a member of the advisory boards of the 
journals Foreign Affairs and National Interest .

Among his many awards for public service are:

The Presidential Citizen's Medal,
The Department of Defense's Distinguished Public Service Medal,
The Department of State's Distinguished Honor Award,
The Department of Defense's Distinguished Civilian Service Medal, and
The Arms Control and Disarmament Agency's Distinguished Honor Award.

Dr. Wolfowitz received a bachelor's degree from Cornell University
(1965) in mathematics, and a doctorate in political science from the
University of Chicago (1972).

(Current as of March 2001) Updated: 06 Mar 2001

http://www.defenselink.mil/bios/depsecdef_bio.html
End<{{{


From
http://www.atimes.com/se-asia/CC21Ae01.html

}}}>Begin
 March 21, 2001
atimes.com

Southeast Asia

Paul Wolfowitz: A man to keep a close eye on
By Tim Shorrock*

In an unguarded moment last May, Richard Holbrooke opened a foreign
policy speech in Italy with a fawning tribute to his host, Paul
Wolfowitz, the dean of the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced
International Studies.

Wolfowitz was a senior diplomat in the Reagan and first Bush
administrations, having succeeded Holbrooke in 1983 as Assistant
Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs. President Bush
recently appointed him to the No 2 spot in the Defense Department.

In his new position of deputy secretary, Wolfowitz will have day-to-
day control over the Pentagon and a perch to play out his hard-line
views on theater missile defense (TMD), which he supports; North
Korea, which he views as the rogue nation TMD was designed for; Iraq,
where he wants the United States to arm the opposition; and China,
which, according his comments to the New York Times last year, he
sees as "the major strategic competitor and potential threat to the
United States". Wolfowitz will also play a key role in forming and
shaping new military alliances - a job he took to with relish in the
waning years of the Wold War.

Holbrooke, a senior adviser to Al Gore, was clearly aware that either
he or Wolfowitz would be playing important roles in next
administration. Looking perhaps to assure Europe of the continuity of
US foreign policy, he told an audience in Bologna last year that
Wolfowitz's "recent activities illustrate something that's very
important about American foreign policy in an election year, and that
is the degree to which there are still common themes between the
parties".

East Timor: Classic Bipartisan Foreign Policy

The example he chose to illustrate his point was East Timor, which
was invaded and occupied in 1975 by Indonesia with US weapons - a
security policy backed and partly shaped by Holbrooke and Wolfowitz.
"Paul and I," he said, "have been in frequent touch to make sure that
we keep [East Timor] out of the presidential campaign, where it would
do no good to American or Indonesian interests."

East Timor is a classic example of the bipartisan nature of US
foreign policy during the Cold War - and the secrecy surrounding US
military support for authoritarian leaders like president Suharto,
who ruled Indonesia from the US-backed coup in 1965 until his
downfall in 1998. There is an unbroken link from the Ford-Kissinger
years, when the US backed Suharto's invasion of the former Portuguese
territory. This continued through the Carter, Reagan, Bush, and
Clinton eras, when US policy focused on supporting Suharto's military
and burnishing his image to the world.

That policy finally changed under Clinton when it became clear that
Suharto and his excesses (in East Timor and within Indonesia itself)
had become a liability to US-Indonesian military ties. At the same
time, US corporations were demanding political stability and national
cohesion to keep reaping profits from their investments in Indonesian
natural resources and manufacturing. Throughout that period, however,
the US military covertly maintained support of the Indonesian
military, even as the generals were openly backing militia groups in
East Timor that ravaged the territory after its citizens voted
overwhelmingly for independence in 2000.

If Holbrooke is to believed, he and Wolfowitz tried to keep the long,
sordid history of American involvement with Suharto hidden from the
American electorate during the most recent campaign. That in itself
is a sad commentary on the mentality of these men and their dislike
of open debate about US foreign policy goals. But perhaps Bush didn't
keep to his script; it was he, after all, who brought up Indonesia,
mentioning during the second presidential debate that he supported
president Clinton's decision to back the Australian force that
entered East Timor to end the bloodshed in 2000 (this was the same
session when Gore showed his bipartisan colors, too, asserting his
support for Reagan's invasions of Grenada and Panama).

Knowing Bush and his shaky understanding of anything outside of Texas
or baseball, we can be almost certain that his lines on East Timor
came right out of Wolfowitz who, along with Condoleezza Rice, formed
the core of Bush's foreign policy advisers - a group known as the
"Vulcans". According to the Washington Post, Rice and Wolfowitz (who
was recruited into the Bush camp by Dick Cheney, his former boss at
the Pentagon, and George Shultz, Reagan's secretary of state) briefed
Bush every Monday during the campaign. "Though hardly monolithic in
their views, Bush's foreign policy advisers tend toward the
internationalist wing of the Republican Party, favoring free trade
and an active overseas role that pays special attention to the care
and feeding of allies," the Post reported.

Care and Feeding of Dictators

Indeed, Wolfowitz's career is a textbook example of Cold War politics
that focused for nearly 50 years on the care and feeding of dictators
like Suharto, Chun Doo-hwan in South Korea, and Ferdinand Marcos in
the Philippines. While there were differences in nuance between
presidents, these policies remained remarkably consistent from
administration to administration. Where Wolfowitz and the Reagan
Republicans departed from the Democrats was in their public stance
toward these unsavory figures.

Wolfowitz was Holbrooke's immediate successor in the top Asia slot at
the State Department, serving there from 1982 to 1986. For the next
three years he was US ambassador to Jakarta, and from 1989 to 1993 he
was the "principal civilian responsible for strategy, plans, and
policy under Defense Secretary Dick Cheney", according to his
official biography. He has remained tightly linked to Indonesia
through his role in the US-Indonesia Society, a private group funded
by the largest US investors in Indonesia that, behind the veneer of
"cultural exchanges", pushes for closer ties with Jakarta. Its past
members have also included members of Indonesia's intelligence and
military forces. Wolfowitz is also on several corporate boards,
including Hasbro Inc, a major investor in Asian toy factories.

During his tenure in the Reagan and Bush administrations, Wolfowitz
played a key role in defining US policy toward South Korea and the
Philippines at a time of intense repression and growing opposition to
authoritarian rule. In a speech last year to the right-wing Heritage
Foundation, he castigated those who criticized Reagan for embracing
Chun and Marcos, and defended Reagan's policies as the best hope for
Asian democracy.

During a 1983 visit to South Korea, he recalled, the Korean
government jailed many dissidents, requiring Wolfowitz to become a
"poor hapless administration official sent out to brief the
travelling press corps on what was going on and to explain what was
our human rights policy". That policy, he insisted, was to quietly
advise Chun, who was later held responsible for the murders of at
least 200 people during the 1980 Kwangju rebellion, to "honor the
South Korean constitution and to step down after one term as
president". Chun's decision in 1986 not to run again, he argued, "has
indeed been far more important in resolving human rights problems in
Korea than any number of lists of political prisoners that the
American president might have taken to him".

That is fantasy, and an insult to the hundreds of political prisoners
jailed and tortured by Chun as Reagan and Wolfowitz whispered
democratic shibbeloths in his ear. Even long-time diplomats who
supported the basic thrust of US policy in Korea believe that
Reagan's public embrace of Chun discouraged Korean dissidents and
fueled the fierce anti-American sentiment that still burns today. (As
recently as last year, US soldiers in Seoul were warned not to travel
alone because they might be attacked.) But more to the point, it
wasn't American pleading that forced Chun out. Rather, it was
millions of students, workers, and ordinary citizens pouring into the
streets day after day that forced Chun to back off and eventually
slink away to his family home in the mountains.

In his Heritage speech, Wolfowitz also took credit for the downfall
of Marcos. The "private and public pressure on Marcos to reform", he
asserted, "contributed in no small measure to emboldening the
Philippine people to take their fate in their own hands and to
produce what eventually became the first great democratic
transformation in Asia in the 1980s". Once again, Wolfowitz was
rewriting history, implying that the Filipino people, like the South
Koreans, ignored two decades of massive US military and financial
support for Marcos. In both countries, US policy toward these
dictators (which in Korea would include Park Chung-hee, Chun's
assassinated predecessor) only began to weaken when US officials
decided that their continued hold on power would lead to further
instability, thus threatening US "interests".

With anticommunism no longer the dominant theme in US foreign policy,
US military support for people like Chun or Marcos will be harder to
defend. But given the history of Wolfowitz's dealings with US allies,
it seems reasonable to conclude that he and the Bush administration
will conjure up other national security justifications to support
unpopular leaders.

Imagine what would happen in Iraq, for example, if its US-backed
opposition (which Wolfowitz strongly supports) somehow managed to
overthrow Suddam Hussein, despite its lack of support inside Iraq.
Overnight, the new leaders would become strategic US allies, they
would be presented with new weapons systems, and their life stories
would be embellished into legend. When authoritarian tendencies
eventually emerged, the American people would be told that allies
can't be perfect, but that we have Paul Wolfowitz working behind the
scenes and in public to get our allies to straighten up.

Whitewashing US Allies in Indonesia

If that sounds like hyperbole, consider Wolfowitz's recent public
comments on Indonesia. As late as May 1997, he was telling Congress
that "any balanced judgment of the situation in Indonesia today,
including the very important and sensitive issue of human rights,
needs to take account of the significant progress that Indonesia has
already made and needs to acknowledge that much of this progress has
to be credited to the strong and remarkable leadership of president
Suharto".

Three years later, Suharto had been swept out of office and replaced
by an uneasy coalition of reformists, led by President Abdurrahman
Wahid. Standing alongside Wahid was the Indonesian army, led by
General Wiranto, who for years was a key ally of Suharto and who
maintained extremely close relations with the US military. But that
coalition was deeply split when Wiranto's military supported the
death squads that murdered hundreds of people and laid waste to much
of the territory of East Timor in 1999. In February 2000, Wiranto was
forced to step down after being accused by international observers
and his own government of masterminding the rampage.

A few days later, Wolfowitz appeared on the PBS Newshour with Jim
Lehrer. In the opening segment, reporter Gwen Ifill ran a clip of
Holbrooke, then the UN ambassador, calling the struggle in Indonesia
one between "the forces of democracy and the forces that look
backward". Asked to comment, Wolfowitz quickly agreed with
Holbrooke's characterization, saying "the stakes [in Indonesia] are
huge ... it's very, very important to the United States". Then
Wolfowitz commented on the credentials of General Wiranto - a man he
knows well.

"You asked is Wiranto a reformer or anti-reform," Wolfowitz said, "I
think the truth is he is history, whichever he was ... Wiranto was
the general who commanded the army during the first elections in
Indonesian history... where the army genuinely played a neutral role.
He may have done bad things in East Timor or failed to stop bad
things in East Timor, but that's what makes it so tricky is this
president [Wahid] is a reformer. The old president [Suharto] without
any question was fighting reform every step of the way ... Wiranto,
we don't know. And I think he should be given a fair trial on these
charges in East Timor."

The fact is, we did know about Wiranto; apparently Cold War habits
die hard. Wolfowitz's efforts to whitewash the likes of Chun, Marcos,
Suharto, and Wiranto illustrate the bankruptcy of US foreign policy
from Reagan to Bush. Americans concerned about what is being done
abroad in their names need to watch Wolfowitz's every move, from
Korea to Iraq to Colombia.

Tim Shorrock is a freelance journalist based in Maryland, US, who
specializes in US foreign policy in Asia and labor issues. His
writings have appeared in many publications at home and abroad.

((c) Tim Shorrock. Reposted with permission. This article first
appeared in Foreign Policy in Focus. )




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