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Is War with Iran the October Surprise?
By
Captain Eric H. May, Ghost
Troop Commander
Polls as Prologue

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Republicans Could lose Congress
According to current polls, if the
mid-term elections were held today, President George
W. Bush and his Republican Party would lose badly. He would
then face an opposition Congress in 2007, one bound and
determined to reassert its oversight duties. Investigations,
an inevitability, could easily lead to his impeachment, and in
that event the two-thirds of the United States who don't trust
him could ask troubling questions about his presidency, all
the way back to the still-murky events of 9/11.
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New Congress Could be
Problems
If they're up to their duty, a
new Congress could impeach him as a man who was brought to
power by a war cabal for the sole purpose of starting a war in
the Middle East. They could say that his allegiances are not
-- and never were -- to the American People. Rather, he has
been bought and paid for by the Oil Lobby, the
Military-Industrial Lobby and the Israel Lobby.
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An American Armada
As I write, the U.S. Navy's Second Fleet
has dispatched the aircraft carrier Eisenhower, attended by a
strike group of subordinate ships, from its Norfolk home to
the Persian Gulf, where it is due to arrive on Oct. 21. The
strike group will link up with other pre-positioned military
assets, and could easily start a war with Iran, making it part
of the ultimate October Surprise.
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Officers from the Eisenhower have
reached out to the government, military and media ever since
the orders came, protesting that they don't want to be used to
initiate a war with Iran. They assert that this is against
their service oath to the Constitution, which clearly states
that only the Congress -- not the president -- can start a
war.
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Their distress signal has
reached official circles, thanks to a September article by The
Nation magazine. It's a confirmation of a New Yorker story in the
spring, by Seymour Hersh, alleging that the Pentagon was then
putting the brakes on a Bush administration itching for a war with
Iran.
Congress pretends not to notice
what is happening, though, either too scared, too involved or too
implicated to do its duty. It shamelessly gave away its
authorization to an Iraq War in 2002, six months before Bush began
the attack, and hasn't said a word against what may be the
preparation for an Iran War in 2006. It's been many months since
I've heard Congress say it doesn't think Bush has the right to
start a new war -- and that means it thinks he does.
False Flags and False Friends
A false flag attack is one in
which you or your war partners attack your own forces while
pretending to be someone else -- then blame it on that someone
else. As a lifelong soldier and military historian, it seems
quite possible to me a false flag attack on a U.S. ship in the
Persian Gulf could be planned soon to alter the upcoming
U.S. elections. It would be blamed on Iran, of course.
The U.S. has often gone to war
after Navy incidents that were dubious at best, and false flag at
worst. The Spanish-American War began after the U.S.S. Maine
conveniently blew up as it lay anchored in Havana Harbor, where a
jingoistic U.S. government had sent it as a provocation to a
senile Spain that was trying to put down a Cuban revolution. Our
government immediately called the explosion an attack, and blamed
it on Spain, against whom we afterward declared a patriotic
imperial war. Decades later we admitted to Spain that we knew
they had not attacked us. The explosion was officially called an
"accident" -- but just how accidental was it?
More and more evidence says that in
the months before World War II, the Navy and White House worked
together to allow the Pearl Harbor attack their own officers saw
coming, the better to rouse the public for what was to come. Have
the same powerful officials decided that a Persian Gulf Pearl
Harbor is what we must suffer to start World War III?
If we don't want to do the unsavory
job of a performing a false flag attack on ourselves, we can
always count on Israel to do anything necessary to keep us
fighting against their Middle Eastern enemies. In 1967, they
launched an unsuccessful day-long assault against our U.S.S.
Liberty, then sailing well outside its territorial waters in the
Eastern Mediterranean. They intended to scuttle the ship, kill
its survivors, then blame the attack on Egypt, against whom they
wanted us to go to war. Not one in a hundred Americans know about
the event; both media and government have colluded to keep the
fact silent.
The Devil's Delight
In the aftermath of a successful
false flag attack, blamed on Iran, Bush would have an easy answer
to his current political and military woes: a new enemy. Iran
would certainly fight back against our Navy and Air Force forces
over its own territory, and would probably attack Army
and Marine forces in Iraq. In both cases it could inflict heavy
casualties, and thereby generate war rage in the United States.
The same cooperative media that led the American People into
Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003 could lead it into Iran in
2006. The United States would mobilize the economy and initiate
the draft.
Bush could then use the war as a
perfect excuse to sign the Detainee Treatment Bill -- the torture
bill -- that Congress delivered to his desk two weeks ago. Thus
empowered, he could suspend civil rights -- going back to
habeas corpus -- from anyone he chooses, whether they are
foreigners or U.S. citizens. That would go a long way toward
silencing his domestic critics, whom he considers traitors, and
who are the greatest single impediment to the world war plan he
has served.
All this would mean an American
dictatorship, of course, but Bush came into office saying he
wouldn't mind one -- if he could be the dictator. Funny, how the
media never repeats the words that we really need to hear to
understand who Bush really is. Just a day ago he said that loss
in Iraq would mean the loss of the Middle East, and the loss of
the Middle East would mean the loss of the world's foremost
strategic resource, oil, and we'd be condemned by distant
posterity. He is a man on a mission, still, and he doesn't care
at all what we think of his means or ends.
May God protect the United States
of America.
# # #
Captain May, a former intelligence
and public affairs officer, is the founder and commander of Ghost
Troop, a cyber-intelligence unit on a mission of conscience to
inform the American People of the dangers of the Bush
administration. To learn more about him and Ghost Troop, refer to
the article "Ghost Troop -- the Art of Info-War" in the Lone Star
Iconoclast
http://www.lonestaricon.com/absolutenm/anmviewer.asp?a=402&z=52
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