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  1. #1
    karoshi Senior Member solypsist's Avatar
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    Default Interview with retired CIA agent Robert Baer

    http://www.chronogram.com/issue/2006/02/news/index.php

    The guy is certainly a pessimist, but it's not like he doesn't have good reason to be. I'm actually pretty depressed about the near future after reading this. He touches on Iraq, Iran, and Palestine.

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    TexMec Senior Member Louis VI the Fat's Avatar
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    Default Re : Interview with retired CIA agent Robert Baer

    Quote Originally Posted by solypsist
    I'm actually pretty depressed about the near future after reading this.
    Yes, I share your pessimism about the near future of the Middle East. What a mess.
    They just don't get it. It's not going to happen. We're not going to make a democracy in Iraq unless we stayed there a hundred years and we trained 100,000 Americans in Arabic every year to go over there and completely dismantle their society. If that's the way people want to spend their money. Who is paying for the war? The taxes haven't been raised. We're borrowing money. The supplemental budget for Iraq is a hundred billion dollars.

    LT: Do we just pull out tomorrow? What now?

    RB: I think people ought to start telling the truth, I think the president should get up and say, "All right, we're going to be in this for the next 50 years. The people who were supposed to retire at 60 now get to retire at 75." And then watch. And let the American people decide. I just don't think anyone in Washington can tell the truth.

    LT: Regarding the Iraqi people, do you think the troops should leave tomorrow?

    RB: Probably, and let it happen. Let the divisions occur.

    LT: Then what do you think would happen?

    RB: There'd be a civil war.

    LT: With how many different factions? I have heard that there are 20 different militias or brigades.

    RB: It would make Somalia look civilized.
    LT: You're painting a total end-time scenario in terms of we're damned if we do or if we don't at this point.

    RB: I was in Iran last spring and talked to one of the ayatollahs there. He said, "These people are wolves, are pitiless wolves"—this is the Sunni he's referring to—"and as soon as we get an opportunity we're going to go in and slaughter them." He said this on camera to me, an American, ex-CIA on top of it. There's a great article by Chris Dickey [in Newsweek] about [how] the Iranians all want nuclear bombs. All of them: liberals, pro-American, everybody thinks Iran should have one. What bothers me is, the people in Washington, in the think tanks, really don't know what is going on and are making policy.
    RB: We don't attack the mosques in Saudi Arabia where these people are being recruited. We don't even want to know. They're the people who are killing us now. Not Zawahiri. Zawahiri is not in charge of Qaeda. And Qaeda is just an idea. Going after him we're seeking retribution as opposed to stopping future attacks, which are coming out of Saudi Arabia.

    LT: You raise a lot of questions about the US relationship with Saudi Arabia, that the US is locked in a "harmony of interests" that set the stage for 9/11. Give some evaluation of Saudi Arabia, the US's interests, and why were there 15 Saudis on the planes. Why were Saudi families whisked out of the US? Why do we have this connective tissue?
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    The very model of a modern Moderator Xiahou's Avatar
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    Default Re: Interview with retired CIA agent Robert Baer

    I like the part where he compares Israel to a Klu Klux Klan colony being placed in Detriot.
    It's sort of like if you took a Ku Klux Klan colony and placed it in Detroit and you paid for it.
    Last edited by Xiahou; 02-12-2006 at 04:11.
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    Philologist Senior Member ajaxfetish's Avatar
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    Default Re: Interview with retired CIA agent Robert Baer

    RB: I think they have to do it on their own, at their own pace. I don't recall anybody arriving in the United States forcing democracy on Americans, or the British, or anybody else. It's a very racist attitude to think that it has to be done from outside.
    I tend to share this attitude, but he put it better than I've been able to. I think in order to appreciate something like democracy the driving force has to come from within. Otherwise it runs out of steam pretty soon.

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    Oni Member Samurai Waki's Avatar
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    Default Re: Interview with retired CIA agent Robert Baer

    ...I wholeheartedly agree with him, and for that, I am very depressed.

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    karoshi Senior Member solypsist's Avatar
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    Default Re: Interview with retired CIA agent Robert Baer

    Hmmm...yes i see your point. it's misguided. putting the kkk (a group hostile to blacks) in a black neighborhood is different than putting israel (who aren't anti-arab) in an arabic geography.

    But i think what he was trying to get across was made, despite itself.


    Quote Originally Posted by Xiahou
    I like the part where he compares Israel to a Klu Klux Klan colony being placed in Detriot.

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    Nobody expects the Senior Member Lemur's Avatar
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    Default Re: Interview with retired CIA agent Robert Baer

    Best analysis of the situation I've read in ages. Don't know if the situation is quite as bad as Baer thinks it is, but you can't fault the man for intelligence and vision.

    I really do wish the politicians would level with us about what we've gotten into. It's a big, ugly, long-term situation, and the American people would do better by knowing the facts. It's not as though Americans can't make sacrifices --we can, and we will, if the case is explained to us, and the cause if sensible. I hold the Republicans in slightly more disgust about this, since as the party in total power, the responsibility for governing is theirs.

    But I don't hold any fantasies that the Dems would do better.

    Thank goodness for guys like Baer who can call it like they see it.

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    Darkside Medic Senior Member rory_20_uk's Avatar
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    Default Re: Interview with retired CIA agent Robert Baer

    Considering recent wars such as Vietnam in a smaller country and America finally pulled out. America was not keen to get into WW1 or WW2 for that matter. Sure, things have changed, and perhaps Americans are now keen to go into the lion's den for eternity.

    IMO spending say 10% of the money to be spent on troops on methods to find alternate fuels / economy of oil would be money better spent.

    I'd love it if America in 5 years time said "yeah, the middle east is still a mess, but look at our new solar panels, hybrid cars and biofuel cash crops!! Get your energy from the USA - who needs the Middle East?"

    Impossible? 5 years, definitely. There was an article from the BBC that stated America's energy needs could be met by solar and wind from Texas and 2 other states (I admit they'd be covered by panels and windmills to achieve that), but surely a far more widespread smattering of the things could be possible with capital? Biofuel - look at Brazil.

    In essence there is already the tech to drastically reduce the need for oil. We've spent long enough with our economies based on some really dangerous areas, and with far less money than occupation America could genuinely show the world the way forward.

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