Reflexions of
Comrade Fidel
THE EMPIRE FROM THE
INSIDE
(Part one)
I
am amazed at the widespread ignorance about issues so vital for the existence
of mankind, at a time that it has great media, unimaginable a hundred years
ago, some as recent as the Internet.
Just
three weeks ago the news was announced of the imminent distribution of a
spectacular book by Bob Woodward, The Washington Post journalist, whose
articles with Carl Bernstein, 38 years ago, led to the Watergate scandal which destroyed
the Nixon administration for spying against the Democratic
Party in June 1972, for violations of laws that American society could not
ignore.
I contacted our "ambassador
in Washington," as I call Jorge Bolanos, the head of the Cuban Interests
Section in the U.S. capital, and asked him to send me at least two copies of
the book as soon as it appeared in the bookstores. Bolaños sent four
copies.
The
text is in English, of course, and as usual it will be long before the over 500
million people who speak or understand Spanish worldwide, including the Latin
American immigrants in the United States, can read it in that language.
I
contacted one of our best English translators, and asked for a special effort
to summarize the contents. The voluminous copy, entitled "Obama's wars", has 33
chapters and 420 pages.
I
should point out that I was given an overview of the 33 chapters, in 99 pages in
18 point type, in just three days.
I
will pass on the contents of this book, using the exact words, crystal clear
and precise, that the English translation specialist sent me. It will take up
the Reflections for several days.
It
would be impossible to understand anything about the current U.S. policy if the
contents of this book by Woodward are ignored. He is the holder of more than
one Pulitzer Prize and, for sure, has absolutely no intention of destroying the
empire.
Our
country will be the first in the world to know the essential contents of this
book in an articulate form. As it is known,
Cuban citizens have high levels of education, and it is the country with
highest percentage of students enrolled in universities.
Our main strength is not
in arms, but in ideas.
CHAPTER 1
“Two
days after being elected President, Obama summoned the national intelligence
director, Mike McConnell, for a meeting in Chicago to get details about the
most secret intelligence operations of the extensive system of espionage in the
United States. Other officials participated in the meeting, but McConnell said
he had orders from former President Bush not to disclose the information
related to spies, the new techniques of infiltrating Al Qaeda, the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan and the protection of the nation, to anyone other
than the elected president.
Michael
J. Morell,
Head of the CIA analysis department, and McConnell sat alone with Obama in a
secure room. He was informed, among other matters, that the main threat to
the United States came from Pakistan and that this was the No. 1 priority of
the NID. If the U.S. withdrew from Afghanistan, India and Pakistan would
fill the power vacuum. The best was that Obama should seek peace between the two
countries. Bush had ordered the drone attacks on the camps in Pakistan, and
he had instructed that this country should be notified "concurrently";
that is, when the attack occurred or, for greater security, few minutes later.”
We encourage readers to take note of the names of each of the personalities
mentioned, as well as the theories developed to justify the incredible events
that take place.
“Al
Qaeda had recruited people from 35 countries whose passports did not need a
visa to enter the United States, and that was a big concern. Obama was
informed of the key words for the attacks by drones (SYLVAN-MAGNOLIA), only known
by those with the highest level of access to security issues, among whom was
now the new president.
The main successes came from human sources,
spies on the ground. The CIA told them
where to look, where to hunt and where to kill. The spies were the real secrets
that Obama carried with him from now on. The CIA was very
careful with their sources.
Each one had a code name, for example, MOONRISE. When too many people knew about him or her, or their successes, they were
liquidated. The officer in charge of the case reported that MOONRISE had made the ultimate sacrifice, but the person in question had not really
died. Only their codename changed, and now the CIA would have another source called
SOOTHING STAR, the same person with a new name.
One
important secret that has never been reported in the media, or anywhere else,
was the existence of a covert army of 3,000 men in Afghanistan, whose objective
was to kill or capture Taliban and sometimes venture into the tribal areas to
pacify them and get support.
McConnell
and Morell referred to the Iranian nuclear program. It was known that
they were trying to obtain nuclear weapons and had hidden installations. McConnell said he
was confident that Iran would get a gun-type nuclear weapon, probably primitive,
but that could detonate in the desert with great effect and that in his opinion
this would occur between 2010 and 2015.
Another
major threat was North Korea, which had enough material to make six bombs. The Koreans would
talk, they would lie, would threaten to leave and then they would try to
renegotiate.
The Chinese had hacked the
computers of the Obama campaign in the summer of 2008 and also those of McCain,
and had removed files and documents at an astounding rate. McConnell said
the United States were vulnerable to cyber attacks.”
Straight away, the
Woodward book reflects Obama's first reaction to the mess and complexity of the
situation created by the war on terror unleashed by Bush.
“Obama told one of his
closest advisers he had inherited a world that could explode at any time in
over six different ways, and had powerful but limited means to avoid it. Obama
acknowledged that after the elections, all the world's problems were seen as
his responsibility and that people were saying, 'You are the most powerful
person in the world. Why don’t you do something about it?”
CHAPTER 2
“John
Podesta, former chief of staff to Bill Clinton, was convinced that the policy should
be designed, organized and monitored through a centralized system at the White
House. But Obama had someone else in mind for the post: Rahm Emmanuel, who
became the No. 3 of the White House. Both were from Chicago but they did not know each other well.
Obama,
as presidential candidate, had told David Petraeus in Iraq to ask for
everything he would need if eventually he became Commander in Chief. Obama was
ready to say 'no' to what Bush had said 'yes'.
Petraeus virtually redefined the concept of war in a new manual he wrote (Counterinsurgency
Field Manual) that came into effect in Iraq. His main idea was
that the U.S. could not get out of the war. They had to protect
and win over the population, live among them, for a stable and competent
government to succeed. The new soldier, he said, should be a social worker, a physical planner, an
anthropologist and a psychologist.
Petraeus
had few hobbies (he didn’t fish, hunt, or play golf). He could pass for
a man of 35, and run 5 miles in about 30 minutes. He earned his
Ph.D. at the University of Princeton. His father died and he decided to stay in Iraq to oversee the
war. The
Iraqis call him King David. Some of his colleagues call him the Legend of Iraq. But the Obama
presidency would change the status of Petraeus.”
CHAPTER 3
“The new Director of the CIA, Mike
Hayden, traveled to New York to discuss, with Pakistani President Asif Ali
Zardari, the attacks by unmanned 'Predator' planes within that country. The great lesson
of the Second World War and Viet Nam was that attacks from the air, even massive
bombing cannot win a war.
The
Pakistani media was concerned about the number of civilian casualties. But the
accidental death of Pakistanis was only half the story.
In a meeting Hayden had
with the Pakistani President, the latter told him: Kill the principals. You Americans can
worry about collateral damage. I’m not worried.' Zardari gave the CIA the green light and Hayden thanked him
for his support.
In
one of his long conversations with David Axelrod, his chief political adviser
and closest to him, Obama brought up the issue of Hillary Clinton. Axelrod asked
Obama how he could trust Hillary. Obama replied that he believed he knew her well and if she were
part of the team, she would be faithful to him. She stood beside her husband
during the Monica Lewinsky scandal, and Obama was impressed by her resilience. He needed someone
with enough stature to become a major player in the international arena.
Mrs.
Clinton was not convinced that this post would be for her. There was no body
of trust between her team and his.
Then
came the problems with her husband and the contributors of large sums of money
to his presidential library, his foundation and the Clinton Global Initiative. Obama's lawyers
said these entities could not accept money if Hillary was appointed Secretary
of State. She acknowledged that this was a big hurdle but she would not
send Bill to live in a cave for four or eight years. She was not going
to tell him to cancel the operations he had in 26 countries and were saving
lives, she said, it was not worth it. Podesta promised they would work on that.
She
prepared a speech in which she thanked Obama, by phone, for having taken her into
account for the position, but Podesta saw to it that both could not connect.
The
'no' from Hillary was transformed into a 'maybe'. Mark Penn, chief
strategist for her campaign, thought that if they remained at the State
Department for eight years, she would again be in the best position to be nominated
for President. She would only be 69, the same age as Reagan when he took
office.”
CHAPTER 4
“Retired General James L.
Jones considered that the Bush administration was amazingly disorganized and
unfortunately not very serious regarding peace in the
An over large sector of US policy was on autopilot, and the National
Security advisor had to find the way to achieve results without having detailed
control of what different departments and agencies were supposed to do. Obama asked him how he could achieve that. Jones
recommended that he should convince his subordinates that their vision was the President´s vision. […] Obama
decided to appoint Jones National Security advisor. Jones was surprised that Obama had appointed him for a post with such a high
responsibility and that he trusted someone that he hardly knew. Jones thought
everything was based on personal relations, and he did not have such relations
with Obama.
On November 26, Bush called one of the last meetings of the National
Security Council to analyze a very secret report on the war in
Another astonishing episode now follows, behind which was
the hand of the
“Condoleezza
Rice was not pleased with the report. Bush decided not to publish it. Later, 10
armed people began prowling the Indian city of
CHAPTER 5
“On taking on the post as
CIA director, Hayden had inherited and organization that, according to him, was
suffering from the battered child syndrome.
Obama had called him to a briefing on covert operations.
Hayden considered it to be the opportunity to prove how serious the threats
were and how seriously the CIA took them. He referred to 14 highly secret
operations, whose objective was to carry out covert and lethal operations
against terrorism, prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons, discourage
North Korea from building more nuclear weapons, carry out operations against
proliferation in other countries, operate in an independent manner or in
support of the United States in Afghanistan, carry out a series of lethal
operations and other programs in Iraq, support undercover efforts to stop
genocide in the Sudanese region of Darfur, and offer
Turkey intelligence information to prevent the Workers’ Party in the Kurdistan
from establishing a separatist enclave in Turkey.
On
CHAPTER 6
“Obama
asked Biden to travel to
Biden officially told the Pakistani President
about Obama’s idea:
Zardari, for his part, admitted not having as
much experience as his late wife Benazir Bhutto, but
he said his mission was not different and that he needed the United States to
help him win enough support on the domestic scene, and that there was much
anti-American feeling in the country.
Biden warned him that in that direction Zardari
had to stop playing in both teams at the same time, since the CIA thought that
much intelligence information was being used to alert terrorist camps about the
attacks by unmanned planes.
Biden and Graham left for
Karzai called several members of his cabinet to inform Biden and Graham directly about what he was doing. Karzai was told that Obama wanted
to help, but the idea of lifting the phone and calling President Obama as he used to do with Bush would not happen anymore. Biden criticized Karzai for his
inability to rule the whole country, for his rejection of touring the country
to raise a consensus among the different tribes, for the sumptuous homes of
Afghan officials near the presidential palace and which undoubtedly were being
paid for by the
Karzai was critical about the large number of civilian
victims and Biden committed to minimize them, but he
warned that he had to join them in that war; he said that if it was not their
war, the United States would not send more troops. Karzai
replied that he was not making any criticism, but letting them know about a
problem. Biden suggested addressing the issue in
private, not at a press conference, and Karzai did
not agree. The number of civilian victims was a public problem and Biden had denigrated him in front of his cabinet members. Karzai warned that the Afghan people would not tolerate
that, and the Afghan people should be their allies and not their victims.
Ambassador William Word said that the conversation had been useful but that it
revealed frustrations on both sides.
Biden met with the chief of the American troops in
Biden suggested
that Obama distance himself from Karzai.
Graham told the President that they were losing the war. Graham was convinced
that it was impossible to win the war in
CHAPTER 7
“Obama’s
swearing-in ceremony on January 20 was about to be cancelled. Reliable
intelligence reports indicated that a group of Somali extremists were planning
to attack Obama with explosives. However, all the
attention was focused on Obama’s speech and what he
would say.
General Petaeus was again concentrating on
Obama called a meeting of his National Security group on
January 21. The key decision was to appoint Petraeus
chief of the Central Command. Obama requested three
options on the war on
A
team of 80 people began to study the situation in
When Petraeus asked what they had found, Derek Harvey, from the
Defense Intelligence Agency, said that the situation was similar to that of a
blind man helping another blind man to walk, that the United States was very
ignorant about the Afghan insurgence, about who and where the enemy was, and
the enemy’s perception of the war and their motivation.
They knew too little about the
enemy to draw up a strategy that would lead to victory.
Obama said that the sending of new troops should be
announced as part of a new strategy. Petraeus
indicated that they would not reach their objectives without a larger number of
troops, and that they could not just rely on the attacks by unmanned planes. Petraeus insisted on the sending of the 30,000 troops. Obama asked if sending all those troops at once was
necessary, and he warned that it was before having a strategy and that the
President needed him to propose the decisions to take. The President seemed to
understand that the war would not be won in one or two years. The President
left the meeting to fulfill other commitments without having taken any decision
on that respect.”
To be continued tomorrow
Fidel Castro Ruz