“The same ideology that brought carnage
on Iraq and Palestine is the same ideology that makes you lose your home
tomorrow.” --Gilad Atzmon
Comparisons are said to be invidious, but in the right hands
they can be very illuminating.
The toxic dust from the economic 9/11 of 2008 hadn’t even
begun to settle when a perceptive observer noticed an important connection to
the geopolitical fallout from the more dramatic 9/11 seven years earlier.
On September 16, Gilad Atzmon, an Israeli expatriate, told
the Cambridge Forum: “As the picture of the current economic disaster becomes
ever more clear, it becomes rather obvious, to me at least, that the ideology
and the people who are directly responsible for the mass killing of millions of
Iraqis and the displacement of many other millions, the people who keep the
Palestinians starved behind walls, are unfortunately very much the same people
who are responsible for a class genocide of millions of disenfranchised
Americans who are now on the brink of total dispossession.” [1]
A tale of two doctrines
To illustrate, Atzmon outlined two key doctrines which had
catalyzed these apparently disparate crises.
The 2003 invasion of Iraq, Atzmon said, had its origins in
the Pentagon’s 1992 Defense Planning Guidance. Drafted by the then Under
Secretary of Defense for Policy, Paul Wolfowitz, and his protégé, Lewis
“Scooter” Libby, the “Wolfowitz Doctrine” urged America to assume a more
assertive, interventionist role in the post-Cold War world, particularly in the
Middle East.
But essentially it was an “imperialist Zio-centric document”
which proposed “to merge American and global Zionist interests into a unified
belligerent practice.” And America’s thirst for Arab oil was the key to
achieving this merger.
“Wolfowitz and Libby, so it seemed at the time, found the
way to heaven. They were about to kill two birds with just a single (cruise
missile) shot. They planned to rob the Arab oil and to ‘secure’ their beloved
Jewish state simultaneously.”
Similarly, Atzmon traced the financial collapse of 2008 to
policies advanced by the then chairman of the Federal Reserve, Alan Greenspan.
By encouraging underprivileged Americans to recklessly borrow and spend, the
“Greenspan Doctrine” fueled the subprime mortgage boom which helped “to finance
the wars perpetrated by his ideological brothers Libby and Wolfowitz.”
“He knew very well that as long as Americans were doing
well, buying and selling homes, his president would be able to pursue
implementing the ‘Wolfowitz doctrine’ destroying the ‘bad Arabs’ in the name of
‘democracy.’”
While the bold experiments proposed by Wolfowitz and
Greenspan may have “looked promising on paper,” they ultimately proved to be
disastrous not only for the Middle East, but also for America. But this, Atzmon
said, shouldn’t have surprised anyone.
“Let me tell you, the pattern is familiar, these wonderful
people always try to save the world. They ‘bring’ democracy to the Arabs, they
‘bring’ equality to the poor. But somehow, Israel is always set to benefit.”
The people in between
Shortly after Atzmon delivered his “Credit Crunch Or Rather
Zio-Punch?” talk, a most important book was published which came to the very
same conclusion. However, in Guilt By Association: How Deception and
Self-Deceit Took America to War,
[2] Jeff Gates shows precisely how Americans were deceived.
Central to Gates’ analysis is the concept of “the people in
between.”
“The national mental state is the in between
battleground where the people in between displace facts with what people
can be deceived to believe.”
Clearly, Wolfowitz and Greenspan fit this description
perfectly. In the interlocking spheres of geopolitics and economics, they had
waged unconventional warfare on the minds of Americans -- all for the sake of
Zion.
In an interview with this writer, published as “The Source
of the Economic Crisis: A Chicago State of Mind,” [3] Gates elaborated on how
this Zionist duplicity operates: “All flows downstream from a ‘consensus’
perspective -- regardless whether the deception is a shared belief in Iraqi
weapons of mass destruction or a consensus faith in the infallibility of
unfettered financial markets. The modus operandi is identical -- the
displacement of facts with beliefs.”
Shaking off our common enemy
In his talk, Gilad Atzmon decried “our apathy towards the
suffering of others that makes Iraq, Palestine and Afghanistan into a single
narrative of Western collective indifference.”
However, our economic pain, Atzmon believes, “provides us
with an opportunity to see that as far as misery is concerned, we are together
with the Palestinians, the Iraqis and the Afghans. We share one enemy.”
To drive home the point to his Cambridge audience, he
reminded them: “The same ideology that brought carnage on Iraq and Palestine is
the same ideology that makes you lose your home tomorrow.”
That being the case, then, in a very real sense, aren’t we
all Palestinians now?
And just as that most subjugated people periodically rise up
“to shake off” (the literal meaning of intifada) their oppressors, if
the systematically deceived people of the world ever see through the fog of
deception, they may realize it’s time for the first global Intifada.
1. Gilad Atzmon, November 16, 2009. “Credit
Crunch Or Rather Zio-Punch?” Gilad Atzmon.
2. Jeff Gates, 2008. Guilt By Association:
How Deception and Self-Deceit Took America to War.
3. Maidhc Ó Cathail, June 26, 2009. “The
Source of the Economic Crisis: A Chicago State of Mind,” Media Monitors
Network.
http://usa.mediamonitors.net/Headlines/The-Source-of-the-Economic-Crisis-A-Chicago-State-of-Mind
Maidhc
Ó Cathail is a freelance writer. He has written for Antiwar.com, Dissident
Voice, Online Journal, OpEd News, Media Monitors Network, The
Palestine Chronicle and many other publications.