-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Sept. 27, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
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AS U.S. WAR SEEMS IMMINENT: 
NATO COUNTRIES FEAR BEING DRAGGED IN

By John Catalinotto

The Bush administration has attempted to use the
catastrophic loss of lives at the World Trade Center to both
mobilize the U.S. population for war and line up traditional
U.S. allies for a military strike.

Veteran right-wing cold warriors--Vice President Dick
Cheney, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and his deputy
Paul Wolfowitz--have organized the forward charge. Their
proposals have followed a long-term U.S. strategy
established in the 1990s.

This includes: using NATO as the core of an international
intervention force, a world cop. Calling on the Japanese
military, which is constitutionally forbidden to intervene
abroad, in a supportive role. And then, based on the
experience of the Gulf War of 1991, forming a broader
coalition that includes more unstable U.S. client states in
the Middle East and South Asia.

As of Sept. 17, initial displays of solidarity with the U.S.
government from the NATO powers have turned into warnings to
the Bush administration to avoid any immediate strike and to
choose the target very carefully. The big-business official
media here have reported these warnings.

At home, the administration tried to channel the initial
outpouring of solidarity with the victims of the attacks
into patriotic and pro-war directions. More U.S. flags could
be seen flying than ever in recent memory. Right wingers
made sporadic attacks on Muslim, Arab or South Asian people.

Even among the stunned populous, however, voices have been
raised questioning what was behind the attacks, calling for
no new war moves and demanding that there be no racist
attack on Arab or Muslim people here.

Many people compared the event to the attack on Pearl Harbor
in 1941. However, there are many differences. One is that
millions of youths rushed to enlist in the U.S. Armed Forces
in 1941. Now, while inquiries doubled over the first few
days, few additional people joined up.

Nevertheless, the U.S. military buildup continues.

Orders to call up the reserves have been approved. Rumsfeld
said the 35,000-plus members of special forces like Navy
Seals, Army Rangers and Green Berets and Air Force Special
Tactics groups are "important to our country."

Despite all the dangers and warnings, the Bush
administration is preparing for a calamitous war. In all its
public statements, the administration names as the initial
target of that war the Taleban regime in Afghanistan and
Saudi millionaire Osama bin Laden, whom they allege was
behind the strikes of Sept. 11.

Afghans have been fleeing the cities, fearing U.S. bombing
raids and possible invasion.

Richard Perle, another veteran cold warrior now heading
Rumsfeld's Defense Policy Board, mentioned not only
Afghanistan but also Iraq as a potential target. Since Iraq
sits astride enormous oil reserves, it is a much more
inviting target for the big oil corporations so close to the
Bush administration.

WOLFOWITZ: 'ENDING STATES'

Wolfowitz made the single most aggressive statement on Sept.
13.

"It's not just simply a matter of capturing people and
holding them accountable," he said, "but removing the
sanctuaries, removing the support systems, ending states who
sponsor terrorism." In other words, Wolfowitz was making a
direct threat that U.S. troops may be used to occupy any
country Washington chooses to blame.

On Sept. 12, for the first time in NATO's 52-year history,
the alliance declared that the attacks on one member--the
United States--were an act of war against the entire 19-
member alliance. It pledged military support for any U.S.
retaliation.

This was an obviously illegal use of the NATO charter's
Article 5, which refers to an attack on a NATO member by
another state's military.

Wolfowitz is rumored to be the author of the so-called
Pentagon White Paper published by the New York Times in
March 1992. This paper set out the strategy to maintain U.S.
dominance in every region of the world and to show other
countries--including U.S. allies--"that they need not aspire
to a greater role." NATO was to be the main instrument of
U.S. domination in Europe, forcing the European imperialist
powers to follow the U.S. lead.

Before and during the U.S.-led war against Yugoslavia,
Washington's strategists proposed expanding NATO's role,
turning it from an anti-Soviet alliance into a sort of world
cop against any country or movement that resisted capitalist
globalization. The aggressive war and 79-day bombing
campaign against the Yugoslav people was the first such use
of NATO.

The administration has also requested that Japan contribute
military forces to support U.S. actions.

By Sept. 13, the Bush administration appeared to have lined
up NATO and was trying to expand its support for something
like the "coalition" forces that occupied Saudi Arabia and
made war on Iraq in 1991. Now, however, there was a more
than implied threat that any nations refusing to join the
U.S.-led campaign could be considered enemies and attacked.

According to the Sept. 14 New York Times, "Secretary of
State Colin L. Powell used language similar to the bellicose
phrases he employed in 1991, when he said of Saddam
Hussein's army in Kuwait, 'First we're going to cut it off,
and then we're going to kill it.'" Powell was head of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff during the 1991 war.

All the administration spokespeople have used terms like
"war," "protracted war," "campaign" and the "wrath of the
United States."

According to the Times, the so-called campaign "could
involve American forces in protracted fighting against a
number of Asian and African countries, like Afghanistan,
Iraq, Sudan and even Pakistan."

Powell more or less gave an ultimatum to the Pakistani
regime that it must assist Washington in pressuring the
Taleban to turn over bin Laden or it will face the
possibility of itself becoming a target. After a seven-hour
meeting, the ruling group of generals in Pakistan decided to
go along with Powell's demands.

Bin Laden's group originated in Afghanistan among guerrillas
who fought the progressive government there and the Soviet
troops that government had called on for support. The
Pakistan Secret Services and the Pakistan military, with
funding and financing by Washington, trained them.

All U.S. threats against sovereign nations made under the
excuse of hunting terrorists, all the calls for a "war"
violate the Charter of the United Nations.

END OF VIETNAM SYNDROME?

Along with lining up international allies, the Bush
administration has also sought to exploit the Sept. 11
tragedy to whip up patriotism and mobilize the population
for war. Such a protracted war would undoubtedly produce
casualties among U.S. forces, too, especially if there are
land battles and an occupying army.

Since the U.S. war against Vietnam, the U.S. population has
refused to support military adventures that result in
extensive casualties among U.S. youths.

When 18 U.S. Marines died in Somalia in 1993-while involved
in an operation that killed 1,000 Somalis--that was enough
to force a pull-out of U.S. forces. The Pentagon refused to
admit any casualties in the extended air campaign against
Yugoslavia, and remained reluctant to intervene by land to
the very end.

Pentagon generals and U.S. political leaders have chafed
over this obstacle to military moves. In Gen. Wesley Clark's
book "Waging Modern Warfare," he complains that he considers
this a serious weakness in the U.S. armed forces and
concludes it must be overcome. Clark commanded NATO forces
during the assault on Yugoslavia.

The Bush crew apparently believes the anger and fear over
the Sept. 11 attack gives it an opportunity to demand such
sacrifices and get away with it.

As a first step, Bush won a blank check from Congress for
military action. The Senate voted 98 to zero to authorize
war measures, the House 420 to one. Barbara Lee of
California was the only dissenter.

On Sept. 14, Bush authorized a call-up of as many as 50,000
reservists and National Guard. The Pentagon said that so far
it requires 13,000 for the Air Force, 10,000 for the Army,
3,000 for the Navy, 7,500 for the Marines and 2,000 for the
Coast Guard.

In the active military, the XVIII Airborne Corps
headquartered at Fort Bragg, N.C., was put on alert. This
corps is made up of the 82nd Airborne, the 101st Airborne,
the Third Infantry Division and the 10th (Mountain)
Division.

Warships in the Persian/Arabian Gulf region are reported to
have begun movements and increased secrecy regarding their
locations.

NERVOUS IN EUROPE

By Sept. 16, the European governments, without directly
taking on Washington, were expressing second thoughts about
giving the Pentagon carte blanche to lead them into some new
version of the Crusades anywhere in the Middle East or
Central Asia.

"The worst thing we could do would be for the West to go
against the Islamic world," German Foreign Minister Joschka
Fisher said. "We must not push Islam in general into the
corner of terror because that would make matters worse."
Fischer was a complete hawk in the NATO aggression against
Yugoslavia.

French Defense Minister Alain Richard said: "Armed action is
only one of the ways of responding. ... What is necessary is
a way that does not provoke other elements of instability."

The strongest rebuff came from Italian Defense Minister
Antonio Martino, according to a Sept. 16 French Press Agency
report. Martino said: "The term 'war' is inappropriate. It
is not a conflict between states and Italian troops will not
go anywhere. I feel I am in a position to categorically
exclude calling on the army."

- END -

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