Uber-Neocons:
The Main Architects of Post-Assad Syria at Work
Bush
Era’s Good-Ol’ Familiar Faces Resurface again on Operation Syria
Sibel
Edmonds
5
May, 2013
With
the approaching Finale for Syria’s Assad the Uber-Neocon architects
of US foreign policy have been hard at work. Assuming (albeit
knowingly) the certainty of the soon-to-come end for Assad’s
government, the neocon architects are drafting and crafting their
objectives for the Post-Assad regime in Syria. I know the mainstream
and pseudo-alternative media use the term “Neocon” loosely and
willy-nilly, but I can assure you this is not the case with my usage
of “Uber-Neocons’ here. You will see that clearly after reading
the following facts.
Yesterday
I found this ‘interesting’ article in the Turkish newspaper Zaman
[All Emphasis Mine]:
Analysts Call on US to Cooperate with Turkey Toward New Gov’t in Syria
A group of US foreign policy analysts called on President Barack Obama and his government to work towards drawing a common road map with Turkey that will help ensure the formation of a democratic, impartial government in a post-conflict Syrian.
The US think-tank Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC) recently formed its Turkey Task Force, co-chaired by former US Ambassadors to Turkey Mort Abramowitz and Eric Edelman. The task force released on Thursday its first report, which points to a critical need for Turkey and the US to cooperate to ensure the formation of a “stable and decentpost-Assad Syria.”
The report also analyzes the differences between Turkish and the US interests in a post-Assad Syria, explaining why it is imperative that the US immediately engage with Turkey in establishing joint principles and plans after a possible ouster of the Assad regime.
…
Do
you notice how many times the term “Post-Assad” is used? Also,
pay attention to the analysts named in the article and note that we
are looking at architects rather than analysts.
Immediately
after reading the above article I went to Bipartisan
Public Center’s website,
and found that the Zaman article had missed the highly-important
third name of the architects aka analysts who have already moved to
phase 2, Post-Assad regime building, obviously due to their
confidence of the soon-to-come fall of the current regime [All
Emphasis Mine]:
Ridding Syria of President Bashar al-Assad has been the goal of the United States for almost two years. Should this objective be achieved, however, an enormous challenge will still remain: stabilizing andrebuilding Syria in a way that advances U.S. strategic goals and values. However, this will require the cooperation of Turkey—a U.S. ally with keen interests in Syria. Ankara’s interests, however, do not perfectly match Washington’s, posing the challenge for policymakers of finding the right tools to align more closely the two countries’ visions of Syria’s future.
Join BPC as it announces the creation of its Turkey Task Force, co-chaired by former Ambassadors to Turkey Morton Abramowitz and Eric Edelman, and releases a paper on the opportunities and obstacles to U.S.-Turkish cooperation towards a post-Assad Syria.
…
And
then, at the bottom, BPC lists the task force principals which
includes a third name:
Panel discussion and report release featuring
Mort Abramowitz
Co-chair, BPC Turkey Task Force
Former U.S. Ambassador to Turkey
Ambassador Eric S. Edelman
Co-chair, BPC Turkey Task Force
Former Under Secretary of Defense for Policy
Former U.S. Ambassador to Turkey
Alan Makovsky
Senior Professional Staff Member, House Foreign Affairs Committee
That’s
right. We get an additional name: Alan Makovsky.
Now,
let us quickly check out the importance of these three personalities
and what they have in common:
Those
of you who have been following the Uber-Neocon circle and its
Uber-Players should immediately recognize Morton
Abramowitz.
[All Emphasis Mine]:
Morton Abramowitz, president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, establishes a number of blue-ribbon commissions, headed by a select group of foreign policy elite, to create a new post-Cold War foreign policy framework for the US. Some of the group’s members are Madeleine Albright, Henry Cisneros, John Deutch, Richard Holbrooke, Alice Rivlin, David Gergen, Admiral William Crowe, Leon Fuerth, as well as Richard Perle and James Schlesinger, the two token conservatives who quickly resign. The commission will issue a number of policy papers recommending the increased use of military force to intervene in the domestic conflicts of other countries.
…
After six years as the Carnegie Endowment’s president, Morton Abramowitz moves on to the Council on Foreign Relations.
…
Morton Abramowitz writes a column in the Wall Street Journal calling for a drastic change in US policy toward Kosovo. Abramowitz is highly influential with the US foreign policy elite (see 1991-1997). He argues that the US should support full independence for Kosovo and outlines options the US should consider including bombing Serbia, removing Milosevic, arming and training the KLA, and turning Kosovo into a NATO protectorate through the use of ground forces.
…
I
guess you all would agree with me on Abramowitz’ status as one of
the crusty Uber-Neocon architects of our dirty foreign policies and
even dirtier foreign operations.
Now,
let’s move to the next architect, Eric
Edelman.
A couple of excerpts from an article that
was written in 2007:
Edelman has close ties to Vice President Cheney and several other administration hardliners. He served under Cheney, then Secretary of Defense, in the first Bush administration. At that time, Cheney set up a “shop” to “think about American foreign policy after the Cold War, at the grand strategic level.” The project also included Paul Wolfowitzand Scooter Libby. [New Yorker, 4/1/02]
From 2001-2003, Edelman served as a national security adviser to Cheney. In 2003, he was named as U.S. ambassador to Turkey, attempting to convince Turkey to cooperate with the Bush administration’s plans to invade Iraq. Turkish columnist Ibrahim Karagul noted, “Edelman is probably the least-liked and trusted American ambassador in Turkish history.”
…
A
good thing this was written by staunch Democrats pre the Obama
Administration. Considering Edelman’s current roles under the Obama
administration we won’t be hearing much from that same group- the
beauty of partisanship in the dumb-ification of Americans. Okay,
let’s read more from commentaries and
articles written by partisans way-back-when it was okay to expose and
criticize Neocons:
But now I discover it was Eric Edelman, Under Secretary of Defense for Policy. That makes a whole lot more sense–and really dictates the proper response. You see, Edelman is kind of a poor man’s Dougie Feith. A total shill–and Cheney asset–though apparently with less flair for propaganda. He’s the bright guy who first suggested leaking Plame’s identity to rebut Joe Wilson. And, as it turns out, he realized after he suggested to Libby that the information in question may have been classified.
After a June 2003 article about Iraq and the uranium issues that caused concern to Edelman and Libby, Edelman asked Libby whether information about how the Wilson trip came about could be shared with the press to rebut allegations that the Vice president sent Wilson. Edelman testified that Libby responded by indicating that there would be “complications” at the CIA in disclosing that information publicly. Ambassador Edelman indicated that he understood that he and Libby could not further discuss the matter because they were speaking on an open telephone line and Edelman understood that this might involve classified information.
…
I
guess the above facts on Eric Edelman suffice in establishing him as
one of the second-generation Uber-Neocons. Are you with me, so far?
Good.
The Turkish Research Program is one of the centers of the institute.[24] The program was founded in 1995. Under the leadership of founding director Alan Makovsky and interim director Helena Kane Finn, the center introduced the Washington policymaking community to Turkey’s leading political, diplomatic, military, and academic figures.
…
Alan O. Makovsky, a Senior Fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, is a specialist on Middle Eastern and Turkish affairs. He joined The Washington Institute in May 1994 after eleven years in the U.S. Department of State, where he had served in a variety of capacities, most notably as Special Advisor to Special Middle East Coordinator Dennis Ross in 1993 and in 1992 as State Department liaison officer and political advisor to Operation Provide Comfort.
…
Probably the most important development in Turkish foreign policy in the last year has been the rapid improvement of its ties with Israel, and this newly strengthened relationship was a topic of much discussion among Turks and Americans at the conference. Alan Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Middle East Politics called the speed with which Turkey and Israel have drawn together ”truly breathtaking” and described it as ”probably the most dramatic strategic development in the Middle East since the signing of the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty ended the prospect of a multi-front Arab assault on Israel.”
…
Speaking at the ATC meetings, Makovsky argued that the most serious problem between Turkey and the United States may stem from the Greek Cypriots’ possible membership in the EU. Indicating that Greece would tell the EU that if the Greek Cypriots are not admitted into the club, Athens would veto enlargement, Makovsky said Washington would have to make a choice: either support the Greek Cypriots’ membership at the expense of Turkey’s anger or oppose the membership. He stressed that the United Sates should not support the Greek Cypriots’ EU membership bid. He also said that he thought the new administration would endorse the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline project.
…
I
have to reluctantly include an excerpt from a site and an author I
truly dislike. The only reason I am including this is to show you the
gang Alan Makovsky is an integral part of, so forgive me for
the source:
The new Israeli-Turkish partnership is a great fit internationally as well. Foiled by human rights groups in Europe, and the Greek and Armenian lobbies in the United States, Turkey needs a reliable source of high-technology military equipment. The Israelis, always the odd man out in their region, are now not so much alone. As for the Turks, always relative strangers in Washington, they now have a well-connected ally, of whom they expect a great deal… And Ankara relies not just on Israelis; to make its case, it also counts on American Jews such as Morton Abramowitz, Douglas Feith, Alan Makovsky,Richard Perle, and Harold Rhode, and on institutions such as the American Israel Public Affairs Committee and the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs.
…
Now,
let me point out another major commonality between Eric Edelman and
Alan Makovsky. Last week I wrote an article on
the CIA’s Graham Fuller and his role in US BlackOps in Central Asia
& the Caucasus, his intimate connections to the Boston Terror
Attack, and very importantly, his presence in my State
Secrets Privilege Gallery since
2008. It is time to revisit my SSP Gallery again: Click
Here
Alan Makovsky and Eric Edelman have both been present together with Graham Fuller in that gallery since 2008.
When
we check further we’ll see that Graham Fuller and Morton Abramowitz
have also been intimately connected, including their partnership in
books and policy paper projects.
There
are not many political and intelligence related subjects where I
publically engage in and declare ‘absolutism.’ However,
there is one point in these areas that has achieved an ‘absolute’
status for me, and that is: There are no coincidences when it comes
to the CIA and our foreign policy black deeds. Whether it is CIA’s
Graham Fuller’s intimate connections to the Boston Terror Attack,
or, Syria-Russia, or the same-old Uber-Neocon architects’
foot-prints and work in the background, a declaration of ‘simple
coincidences’ is nothing short of denial.
I
have been writing, analyzing and talking about the connections
between the Boston Terror, CIA, Graham Fuller, Syria, Russia, and
Caucasus-Central Asia.
You can read my previous analyses at Boiling Frogs Post, and I encourage you to listen to my recent interview, and watch this video. The operatives and Uber-Neocon architects are now busy preparing the second phase for Syria.
You can read my previous analyses at Boiling Frogs Post, and I encourage you to listen to my recent interview, and watch this video. The operatives and Uber-Neocon architects are now busy preparing the second phase for Syria.



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