-Caveat Lector-

THE WAR CONSPIRACY


Peter Dale Scott - Interview Transcript



Stephen Marshall: Hello Peter. I guess I wanted to start off by turning to
some of the work you have done, some of the analysis of U.S. policy and what
you have described as 'deep politics' and 'para-politics' in your books. One
of the things that I feel many people, specifically young people, are lacking
in their approach to understanding what is happening right now is a good
historical context. So let's start with that.


Peter Dale Scott: Alright.


On many of the forums and chat rooms around the web, people are referring to
the current course of action (in the War on Terrorism) and what the "U.S.
government" is going to do. And they think of the government as one singular,
monolithic entity. But in your books Cocaine Politics and Deep Politics you
describe a government that is not a unified organization. Rather, that it is
one of factions and interests who don't always operate from the same agenda.
Can you describe how we should be looking at the government right now? Is it
a monolithic entity being run by the President or is it a group of factions
working with different objectives and agendas?

Well, I think that particularly in a country like the United States, which
has such diverse elements in it, you are going to see those diverse elements
reflected inside the government. There are a lot of tensions. One is, for
example, whether America should try to live as a partner in a world with many
other, different cultures and states within it or whether America should
assert its supremacy. And even in that second camp, there is tension between
the people who believe the military and the use of force is the answer to
problems versus the people who believe in political understanding of other
cultures and states and who advocate a more political and diplomatic
approach.


This is very much being debated at this moment in Washington.


Right. Now you are a person who finds the origins of their work as an FOIA
activist and critical thinker back in the era of the Vietnam War. Maybe even
before then� but, let me ask you, as a person who has witnessed the various
stages of the post-WW II evolution of the U.S. as the dominant global
military power, where would you place this recent event on that timeline? Is
it even linked to that timeline? Where does it emanate from�

Well, I think that the best way to place what is happening right now in
perspective is to see it as fall-out from the Cold War. Back in the 1950's�
first in 1950 and then, again, in 1954, America - rightly or wrongly, I think
wrongly - decided they were dealing with an implacable and absolutely
unscrupulous enemy and actually decreed on paper, in internal documents, that
the United States should be equally unscrupulous in fighting back. And that
was the beginning of the (U.S.) cultivation of terrorism.


We trained the Cuban exiles against Castro, we trained the Contras in
Nicaragua and most relevant to this new crisis, we trained a lot of Afghans
in terrorism� taught them how to commit sabotage and to plant bombs and blow
things up. And now some of those people are fighting back against us.
Coordinating terrorist activities against the United States.


So, when you look at the people who make up Bush's cabinet and various
military advisors, what can we expect to be the dominant or, maybe I should
say, policy response to the attacks?

Well I think its not just the heads in the Cabinet that matter, it�s the
bureaucracy. And there will be a State Department faction that will say we
need to understand the Middle East better and figure out why it is that we're
so hated there. And there are some people who will say we have to do more of
what we've done. And, you know, Congress has just passed a huge blank check,
$40 billion. Well, only $10 billion of it is a completely blank check and the
speculation is that a lot it will be used to build up the CIA in precisely
the areas where the cultivation of terrorism has brought about the culture of
terrorism that is now being used against us.


That's right on point. Now, since the attack on 9-11 there has been a lot of
independent speculation about the origin and nature of the operation. One
camp puts it all in the realm of a totally unforeseen and pre-meditated
attack on the United States while some others see it as a quasi-covert
intelligence operation that is being likened to the American foreknowledge
about Pearl Harbor. What is your opinion?

Well, I'm somewhere in between. I think that they're both wrong. It's
absolutely clear� it's a fact and not a speculation that the United States
had some forewarning of this because they did send out an advisory to
V.I.P.'s - one of them was Mayor Willie Brown of San Francisco - not to
travel by airplane. So they had some degree of knowledge. But that doesn't
mean that they foresaw the whole thing. One of the problems is - and it is a
real problem, I don't totally blame the American government for this - that
if you want to know about these things, then you have to plant informants.
And then, once you have these informants, you don't want to blow their status
because they'll get killed if you reveal that you know what is going on.


A very flagrant example of this was with the FBI in the South at the time of
desegregation in the Sixties. The FBI got people inside the Klan, but the
amount of Klan violence increased quite dramatically because these people who
were the informants were also committing the violence. And they couldn't be
rounded up. To this day, the FBI has never been able to admit, candidly, that
so much the bombings and murders of that period were committed by FBI
informants. I think - I'm only speculating here - that we have a bit of
similar situation with the bin Laden organization. That we do have informants
inside it, it's pretty clear, and some of this came out during the time of
the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center. It's really very instructive to
look at that because two of the people who were convicted had actually been
trained by the CIA in Afghanistan. And it was also clear that there was an
informant in the group who was part of the conspiracy. Well, they don't like
to blow their informants because that's the only way that they get any
inkling at all of what is going on.


That's the problem.


Excellent point. Now, one thing I was thinking about - and maybe it is still
too early to make a proper analysis in this context - but I wanted to bring
this back to your book, The War Conspiracy. You originally wrote that in 1970
and it was a startling look at the various interlocking political and
business interests that drive nations to war. For people who don't know or
who have never read that book, can you explain its premise and whether it has
any practical application to what is unfolding in America right now?


Well, first of all I do think it has an application and I am going to stress
that part of the book which I feel is most relevant.


Cool.

I was saying that we didn't just get into the Vietnam war by accident, we got
into it because certain people were pushing us very hard to get into it. And
among these people were the oil companies (Mobil Oil, most significantly) who
knew ahead of most people that there were considerable off-shore oil deposits
in the South China Sea. But we were also involved by, and this is what I
think is relevant, by our then-allies the Kuomintang (KMT), that had been
pushed out of China but which still ruled Taiwan and which still had the
dream of getting back into China. And the only way the KMT imagined they
could get back into China would be if they somehow involved America in a war
in that area. So that all kinds of events were provoked in a tiny little
country, Laos, by the KMT and their allies in the world, a lot of them inside
the CIA. And so the CIA and the military, both the Army and the Air Force,
would say, "Oh, we must go in to stop communism in Laos."


And this is what I meant by 'The War Conspiracy.' Now the application of that
is that the KMT resources were not restricted to the government of Taiwan.
They had been a global Chinese organization uniting Chinese exiles
everywhere, everyone who was anti-Communist� and the glue of their
organization was the drug traffic. One of the things that has not been
mentioned by the United States press until just this morning is that the bin
Laden organization, also, is glued together, to some extent, by the drug
traffic. And I think that the United States don't want to admit this because
it's going to involve assets of the CIA. I mean, the CIA has very close
links, for example, to the Pakistani intelligence service, the ISI, which, I
think, is deeply financed by the drug traffic. And when we had our operation
going in Afghanistan, the principal beneficiary was a man by the name of
Hekmatyar and thanks, really, exclusively to CIA aid, he was able to build
himself up to be the number one heroin trafficker in the world. I not sure
that the CIA actually intended for this to happen but because of the way that
they work with drug traffickers, this is the consequence. That we build up
drug traffickers.


Right.

And Le Monde has charged that the Osama bin Laden organization is the
principle heir to the Hekmatyar organization and is trafficking to the extent
of billions of dollars. There was a calmer statement of this in the L.A.
Times and one CIA official has said that some members of the bin Laden
organization are involved with drug trafficking. But I think this comes back
home, you know, that this is the CIA's way of asserting itself in the Third
World. It was true in Southeast Asia. It was very conspicuously true in Laos
and Vietnam. In Latin America. The CIA makes itself powerful by allying
itself with people who are powerful locally and this includes drug
traffickers.


So let me try to encapsulate this in broader terms. If I were to say that the
thesis of The War Conspiracy was: a confluence of interests agitate and push
nations toward war or military action at certain times for their benefit and
will even create political reasons for us to become involved in a war, would
I be close?

Yes. And among the forces pushing were the drug traffickers.


OK. So, in applying it to this 'New War' as the networks are labeling it, are
you saying that there are some interests who might have had a hand in the
pre-emptive strike against the United States? People who could benefit from
the imminent military campaign?

No. I'm not saying that at all. There are some people who might want that,
yes. But I'm not sure that this is a U.S. national objective at this time,
although I'm a little shaken at the speed with which the Bush administration
seized on this opportunity to get themselves, well� what amounts
approximately to a $50 - 60 billion increase in its budget.


I guess I am of two minds on this. I am now willing to entertain in my mind
the possibility that some people were willing to see something like this
happen so that they could get the budgets that the Congress and, even the
President, cause he's a low tax guy, wouldn't give them. This is a standard
mode of operation in Europe. In the 1970's there were a lot of explosions,
there were a lot acts of terrorism that were passed off as left wing,
anti-government terrorism which actually had been secretly aided and,
sometimes, even, the explosives provided by military intelligence services
because they wanted initiate what was called a 'strategy of tension'. You
build up an appearance of chaos which then makes everybody rush to increase
the funding and strength that leads to a right wing government.

Which leads to my next question. We both know well the history of the FLQ in
Canada and what became known as the October Crisis. In response to the series
of murders, kidnappings and random explosions, then Prime Minister of Canada,
Pierre Trudeau, invoked the War Measures Act, essentially limiting the civil
liberties of the Canadian population. Now I am not sure if this has ever
happened in the United States but today we are in a War Measures situation.
And I read this this morning... some, I think, Congressmen were publicly
lamenting the fact that they had so quickly signed over power to the
Executive. What I am wondering is whether this attack and the immediate
reaction to it has caused us to take a step back from the democracy we had
before Tuesday. I mean, are U.S. citizens now less enfranchised politically
than they were before the bombing?

Well I think that it's pretty clear that, at least in the short run, Congress
gave away the store when they� they just passed another Tonkin Gulf Resolution
 with respect to this situation. At least there were two votes 'against' in
the Senate against the (original) Tonkin Gulf Resolution, there were none
against this one, one vote in the House. And that was Barbara Lee, our
Representative right here in Berkeley.


But, clearly, now� the whole idea in the Constitution is that Congress has
the right to declare war. Well, Congress has given away that right without
actually declaring war, for the second time. You would have thought that, in
the case of Vietnam, they 'd learned something. But the pressures on the
Congress are extreme in a case like this and they, as far as I'm concerned�
they've given up the store.


I hear you. Peter, let's jump now to your concept of 'deep politics.' Now,
this is something that you have used to describe the events that surrounded
the assassination of JFK. But maybe you can explain what are 'deep politics'
and how they apply to our involvement in conflicts in countries like Vietnam
and Colombia.

Well, the concept there is that things go on that you can't see on the
surface. And, whenever the drug traffic gets involved - we're talking about a
huge economy, the drug economy. Or what I call the cryptonomy, which is
competitive, almost, with the regular economy. I did calculations from the
year 1981 and total world trade in that year was about a trillion dollars and
the CIA's total estimate of the total illicit drug trade for the same year
was half that much: $500 billion. So whatever the exact numbers are, and I
don't think anyone knows, we are talking about a force that is comparable in
strength to the economy that you can see. But nobody, not even the drug
traffickers themselves, know what is really going on in the whole of the drug
traffic.


And that's the dangerous situation that we got into in Vietnam. We engaged in
the process with a force that was very powerful, that could not be seen and
clearly understood by government. And that force, the KMT drug traffic, was
able to steer the ship for a while and get us more involved than we wanted to
and it was very difficult for us to recede.


The same thing, I think, is happening in Colombia today which even I, myself,
don't fully understand. Because we're talking about 'deep forces' that are
not visible. But, by golly, it's so similar to Vietnam. We have a big drug
traffic going on again - a significant factor in the economy of the country
as a whole� making Colombia the only country in the whole of Latin America
that never had to default on or postpone a debt payment to the United States.
Because of the drug traffic. And, in addition, Colombia is the number 8
supplier of oil to this country. And not just oil but also coal. It�s a major
energy supplier.


I don't understand the relationship between oil companies and the drug
traffic but I know there is something going on there because in the late '60s
some of the world's biggest heroin refineries were built in places like the
Persian Gulf where there was nothing else going on but oil refining. You had
the heroin refineries and the oil refineries side by side. And a lot of the
drugs were being shipped out on tankers from the Persian Gulf. Whether the
oil companies knew of it, I don't really know. But I do know that there was
an extreme confluence of interests in the Far East between the drug traffic
and the oil companies and there is visibly, again the same confluence of
interests in Colombia. And one of the things Americans don�t know is that the
oil companies created a special lobby to lobby for an increased U.S. presence
in Colombia. Which they've now got with Plan Colombia.


Now, can we take a leap with that reasoning and the whole approach of deep
politics to what is happening in Afghanistan with bin Laden?

Well� I think it's too early for me to make that leap. We should all think
about it - it certainly appears to me that the bin Laden organization, it
comprises, not uniquely, but elements who were once CIA trained but I don't
perceive, my self, much CIA control over this bin Laden thing. At this point.


Right.

But this is the thing that tends to happen. We train people and then, after
all, we don�t need them anymore, but they're still there� You've taken a lot
of kids at age 15 and for ten years they've been a terrorist, they can't
settle down and open a bookstore or a restaurant. I mean, they go on being
terrorists. And so we have what is technically known as a 'disposal problem'.


We had a huge disposal problem with the Cuban exiles we had trained as
terrorists. A lot of them ended up working for the drug traffickers. And the
same thing with the bin Laden people, they've ended up working for the drug
traffickers.


Let me ask you the same question but in different way. Assuming that this
conflict does pan out into a full-scale, prolonged military operation, are
there people or interests who will directly benefit from that?

Well, first of all I think that it is in the interest of everyone to minimize
the extent to which this is a war effort. That is a very high priority, I
think, for activists. We have to fight terrorism, yes. But if we try to fight
it by turning this into a war and allowing our traditional bureaucracies to
do what they know best which is bombing and invading and so on, we will make
this problem worse. And there will be even longer lists of people lining up
to be martyrs to die against the United States. So the primary issue is that
we mustn't think of this as a conventional war at all. I think that the
alternative path, the necessary one, is to understand the Middle East better
and to understand what their grievances are and to open up lines which can
deal with them. Can I give a practical example?


Sure.

The Taliban should not be identified with bin Laden. But the press is tending
to do that. It's a colossal misunderstanding. And there are elements in the
Taliban, just as there are elements in Pakistan who want to get rid of bin
Laden. One of the Taliban leaders said that Afghanistan should give over bin
Laden to be tried in an Islamic court in another country. They don't want to
give him up to U.S. justice which, I think, in the Middle East context, is
understandable. But they would give him up to an Islamic court. And we should
be leaping at that opportunity. It's being suppressed because it runs against
the agenda of having a bigger CIA and bigger U.S. military operation in the
Middle East.


That's interesting. One last point Peter, I was thinking last night, as I
watched the parade of heavy-hitters from the Bush Sr. administration on the
news, about this whole theory of the New World Order. And while I know it
sounds pretty ridiculous now, after being adopted by conspiracy theorists and
the WWF, this was something that the elder Bush first pronounced publicly in
1990, during the Gulf War. My point is that this whole concept originated way
back in the 20's with the founding of the Council on Foreign Relations and
their stated goal of a world government. Is it not true that, as of right
now, and as a reaction to the attack, the Earth now stands closer than ever
in its history to a globally unified, lateral coalition of world governments?
And in that sense, does this not represent a paradigm shift for the world, at
least geo-politically?

Well I'd like to approach this on two levels. In one way, the role of nation
states is going to wither in the next century, that's inevitable. I do know
that there are a lot of people in this country, especially on the right, who
fear that the New World Order is a kind of conspiracy being imposed from
above by, well, George Bush Sr. and the Council on Foreign Relations and so
on. I think this is, in fact, a really complicated sort of thing. Because if
anything is pushing us toward a New World Order, it's impersonal forces like
trade, you know, as the amount of international trade and international
banking goes up and up and up, inevitably the independence and, in a sense,
traditional sovereignty of single states is diminished. Whether - I don�t
know whether if, implicit in your question, is the idea that certain people
are using these events consciously to manipulate us out of our sovereignty
and into a larger thing -


That is the broad implication of the standard N.W.O. conspiracy theory.

I think it might be more the result but not, I think, the overall intention.
I see it more as a pluralistic thing where different parts of the U.S.
economy and different parts of the U.S. bureaucracy are all fighting for
their own bit of the pie and the result is that 'the way that things used to
be' disappears. But I don't think there is a single intelligence that is
driving us -


Right. Well it's like, that's why I was referring to it as a paradigm shift.
Paradigms, themselves, are not things that man has the power to create or
control. They are more like currents in the ocean and I think -

That's a very good point. A lot people misunderstand what Kuhn was saying
when he talked about 'paradigm shift'. He wasn't saying we should go out and
shift the paradigm, he was saying the paradigm shifts us.


Exactly. And so as a final statement, do you think that we might look back in
a decade and say that this event was a catalyzing factor for the last stage
of a terminal paradigm? For the shift away from, as you describe them, nation
states?

Well, I'd like to put it in slightly different terms and say this is a very
critical juncture. But to me the big issue is whether people will just sit
back and let bureaucrats determine the future of this country or whether, as
in the time of Vietnam, we will scrutinize very closely what the bureaucrats
do and, if it's moving us in a disastrous war direction, rise up to stop
that.
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

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