Over 90 “members of the Republican national security community” have now signed an open letter to express their united opposition to a Donald Trump presidency. The letter makes many reasonable criticisms of Trump for his “military adventurism,” “embrace of the expansive use of torture,” and “admiration for foreign dictators such as Vladimir Putin.”
But some of Trump’s critics have no standing here, given that they’ve publicly supported or even directly participated in the same kinds of things for which they are now criticizing him.
To begin with, the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq was the definition of military adventurism. Yet it was fervently applauded by many of the letter’s signatories, such as:
- Eliot Cohen, co-organizer of the letter and a top official at the State Department during the last two years of George W. Bush’s presidency. Cohen was a prominent supporter of the Project for a New American Century, a key think tank in the push for regime change in Iraq, and a member of the advisory board of the Committee for the Liberation of Iraq. Among his stated reasons that the U.S. should attack Iraq was the fantasy that “Mohamed Atta, the ringleader of the 9/11 terrorists, met with Iraqi intelligence in Prague.” (After 9/11, Cohen also called for regime change in Iran, though it was unclear whether he believed this necessitated a U.S. invasion.)
- Robert Joseph, member of Bush’s National Security Council during the run-up to the invasion of Iraq. Joseph played a key role in the inclusion in Bush’s 2003 State of the Union address of the notorious claim that “Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.”
- Philip Zelikow, member of Bush’s transition team and the President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, and later executive director of the 9/11 Commission. In the summer of 2002, Zelikow said about Iraq, “We can’t wait for these folks to deliver the weapons of mass destruction and see what they do with them before we act.”
- Niall Ferguson, prominent Harvard historian. Ferguson proudly wrote soon after the invasion of Iraq that “I am a fully paid-up member of the neoimperialist gang. Twelve years ago — when it was not at all fashionable to say so — I was already arguing that it would be ‘desirable for the United States to depose’ tyrants like Saddam Hussein.”
While the letter states, “We have disagreed with one another on many issues, including the Iraq War,” I have not been able to find evidence that any of the signatories publicly opposed the war before it began. (If you’re aware of such evidence, please send it to me.) Asked about this section of the letter, Cohen said, “Without going back through everybody’s history, I think some of the signatories were against the war, period.”
As for torture, Trump has in fact said that as president he would authorize its use by U.S. forces. During a February debate, he proclaimed: “I would bring back waterboarding, and I would bring back a hell of a lot worse than waterboarding.”
But several of the signatories have expressed support for torture as well:
- Robert Blackwill, National Security Council deputy for Iraq from 2003 to 2004. Blackwill said in 2005, “Of course torture should not be widespread and of course there should be extraordinarily stringent top-down requirements in this respect. But never? … I wouldn’t say never. … I’m not an absolutist in this regard.”
- Michael Chertoff, former head of the Justice Department’s criminal division and secretary of homeland security during the Bush administration. According to the New York Times, while at the Justice Department, Chertoff advised the Central Intelligence Agency on the legality of various abusive interrogation techniques. Among the methods that Chertoff said would not trigger prosecution was strapping a subject down and making him experience a feeling of drowning.
- Max Boot, journalist. Boot wrote after the recent release of the executive summary of the Senate Intelligence Committee report on torture that he believed it was probable that “the use of torture was related to the success in defending our homeland from follow-up attacks.”
- Reuel Marc Gerecht, former director of the Middle East Initiative at the Project for the New American Century. In 2008, Gerecht called waterboarding an “ugly but defensible act” if U.S. officials believe it to be “required to save Americans from another 9/11.”
Asked whether the critique of Trump’s “embrace of the expansive use of torture” was worded so that advocates of less expansive torture like Blackwill would be comfortable signing, Cohen responded, “I don’t think Bob would say that he advocates torture. … I differ on waterboarding with some of my former Bush administration colleagues (I’m against it, and firmly so), but I think they honestly do not consider it torture.” As noted above, Blackwill specified that he did not categorically object to “torture.”
As for Putin, it’s true that Trump and the Russian president seem to have formed a peculiar mutual admiration society. But signatories of the anti-Trump letter don’t just admire foreign dictatorships, they get paid by them:
- Robert Blackwill. After retiring from his position with the Bush administration, Blackwill went on to become president of the lobbying firm Barbour Griffith & Rogers, International. During this period, BGR represented Eritrea, the private equity firm of Dubai’s emir, and Blackwill’s personal client, Iraqi strongman Ayad Allawi. Eritrea has been ruled since 1993 by the same dictator, with widespread torture of political prisoners and some of the worst restrictions on speech on earth. Dubai is a hereditary monarchy that brutalizes migrant workers. And Allawi, Iraq’s interim prime minister from 2004 to 2005, is widely rumored to have personally murdered several prisoners at a Baghdad police station just before taking office.
- Dov Zakheim, undersecretary of defense during the Bush administration. After leaving government, Zakheim was a senior vice president at the giant security contractor Booz Allen Hamilton, which counts Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates as top clients.
In the end, then, the anti-Trump letter comes across a little like Reggie Bush criticizing Cam Newton for showboating. They’re simply unhappy that Trump is taking their own policies a bit too far.
Additional reporting: Zaid Jilani.
Trump said this morning on CBS that he would not only use waterboarding, but other forms of torture. His “moderation” on this issue didn’t last long.
Sorry,didn’t realize they weren’t the usual suspects, Congress critters, but other Zionist mole traitors.Purge the 90!
Putin is no dictator,Trump has killed no one,and tortured none but Zionist provocateurs.
Take out the first paragraph,a sop to the ignorant and prejudiced illiberal.
Voters,take out the 90 at election time!
Philip Zelikow, member of Bush’s transition team and the President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, and later executive director of the 9/11 Commission. In the summer of 2002, Zelikow said about Iraq, “We can’t wait for these folks to deliver the weapons of mass destruction and see what they do with them before we act.”
——-
If the Executive Director of the 9/11 Commission was a member of the Bush transition team and served on Bush’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board and was effectively a member of the Bush/Cheney administration, what credibility did the 9/11 Commission have? Those of us who have long ago concluded that 9/11 was an inside job argue that the prime suspects got to have the crime investigated by a member of their criminal enterprise. As Executive Director of the Commission, Zelikow was effectively the editor of the final report. He ran the staff and decided what they would look at and what they would not look at. New York Times reporter Phillip Shenon in his book THE COMMISSION reported that Zelikow wrote the entire outline for the narrative that would become the final report BEFORE the commssion actually began their work. What is not mentioned above is that Zelikow co-authored a book with Condoleeza Rice about the fall of the Berlin Wall in the late ninties, and when she became secretary of state Zelikow went to work for her at the State Department. Thats how close they were. The 9/11 Commission had all the hallmarks of a cover-up (as did the NIST investigation). Both the 9/11 Commission and the NIST investigation were not a real investigations. There has never been a real investigation into 9/11.
The other day Trump came out and said “Elect me and well find out who really knocked down the towers”. To be sure he added “You may find it’s the Saudi’s”. He is referring to the 28 redacted pages. If the Saudi’s were directly or indirectly involved then why would the Bush administration cover up for them and redact those pages that implicate them? Trump is not a stupid man as vile as he may be.
Perhaps this is why the Neo-cons are vehemently against him. Trump was sending a subtle message. Don’t mess with me because I will expose the truth of 9/11. You cannot investigate Saudi involvment without it leading to ALL the conspiritors, and the neo-cons know that.
9/11 gave the PNAC Neo-cons licence to impliment their New Pearl Harbour agenda.
“admiration for foreign dictators such as Vladimir Putin.”
This is disappointing from the Intercept. Putin was and remains a popular leader, while all the USA Presidents since the USSR was dissolved want to demonize him. The USA’s present support of Saudi and Honduran leaders tell us what they think of democratic elections.
The US government loved Yeltsin because he stayed in a drunken stupor while the Russian Mafia plundered the country after the breakup. Putin put an end to all that, which is why the US government hates him and demonizes him.
It is true that using the word “dictator” in many cases is to pay lip service to US corporate media narratives. Is there an independent panel that decides which president is or isn’t a dictator? Which elections are or aren’t legitimate? Anyone can be called a dictator, even Obama.
“His embrace of the expansive use of torture is inexcusable”
surely it should have been,
“His embrace of torture is inexcusable”.
Or did I miss the day torture became legal for the US and thus the wordy euphemism, ‘enhanced interrogation’, has been dropped. I am stunned they could get away with that wording and not a voice raised about it.
I’m only commenting on the fact that your article cohere with the “narrative” (narrative meaning in reality: our story that allows us to contain discussion and more effectively get away with lying) that Putin is a demonic, totalitarian dictator who kills people. STOP PERPETUATING THIS GARBAGE.
Not a Trump voter (yet), but to stay honest –
“Donald Trump has reportedly reversed his position on ordering the military to use torture against America’s enemies and to target family members of suspected terrorists, policies he has advocated while on the campaign trail.”
http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/mar/04/donald-trump-torture-position-statement-military-law
That’s the great thing about Trump – he won’t just try to sell you the Brooklyn Bridge, he’ll sell you any bridge you’re willing to buy!!
I feel like The Intercept has wasted a chance to be positive here. There’s enough bad news already! Yeah, some people from the ugly innards of the Republican Party made this statement. Nonetheless, they made it against torture. Honestly, I have felt like there was nothing left, no horror they would not sign on to, and here someone has found a sweet gooey glob of honor hiding at the bottom of Pandora’s barrel. Let’s hope that this marks a turning point – a chance for these people and the Republican Party as a whole to go back and rethink some of those previous policy statements. Lots of politicians (like Trump) have changed their positions … can’t somebody ever change it for the better?
they still want to torture, they just dont want trump to be in charge of it.
Well, they made it against expansive torture, anyway. Baby steps, right?
Pretty amazed to see Dan Drezner undersigning that he’s part of the “Republican national security community”. He’s always vehemently held that’s he’s apolitical.
Never heard of him;Zionist?If so,he is definitely political.
Did Glenn help you with this or throw you a bone?
(Odd that he mentions the same things in his piece today, posted less than 10 minutes earlier than yours.)
In other words, you have no countering point. Stop pretending that you are of Asian descent.
You miss quoted Trump he’s said “heluva” not” hell of a”.
He said cheese?
They opened a big can of worms, and are now shocked that they’ve got slimy hands.
“admiration for foreign dictators such as Vladimir Putin.”
Putin has been elected several times and has close to a 90% approval rating in Russia. How many times do you have to get elected before you are not a dictator? How many times has the queen of England been elected or the Sultan of Brunei? Even Assad has been elected a few times. inf fact, if Assad was the only guy standing between you and ISIS you would probably vote for Assad too. The American Congress, which rigs elections through gerrymandering and financial corruption has had approval ratings less than 10%. How are they legitimate?
I’m really tired of the whole Foreign Dictator meme. Not liking the elected leader of another country might be a reason not to trade with someone, but is it ever a reason invade their country?
Yes,the repeated inclusion of Vlad as the evil dictator,belied by reality and 90% approval ratings is curious,but a running meme among Zionists and their puppets,our crummy pols.(with negative approval ratings)