CFR's Hart Suggests False
Flag Event For Iran War
Tacit warning to
Iranian government suggests staged event may be used to ensure "bombs fall
on your head"
by Steve Watson
Infowars.net
Thursday, Sept 27, 2007
Council on Foreign Relations
member Gary Hart,
famed for stating that Americans will die en-mass on home soil this century,
and for declaring 48 hours after 9/11 that it should be used "to carry out
a new world order", has written a scathing letter to the leaders of Iran
clearly warning that the U.S. government has a history of staging provocations
in order to initiate conflict with other nations and that Iran could be next.
Hart references the sinking of the USS Maine in
Havana harbor in 1898, which led to the Spanish American war, as well as the
Gulf of Tonkin incident, which was ultimately the catalyst for airstrikes on
Vietnam.
Why does Hart reference these two cases? Because
they are both examples of staged managed events that were used to coerce the
American public into supporting war.
The sinking of the Maine was immediately blamed on
the Spanish, with the innovator of yellow journalism William Randolph-Hearst
enflaming anti-Spanish sentiment in his papers by definitively claiming that it
was a Spanish plot. No reliable evidence was ever produced linking Spain to the
event and it is now widely believed that the event was at best a mechanical
failure or at worst a false flag operation.
Similarly the Gulf of Tonkin incident saw
President Johnson accuse North Vietnamese PT boats of attacking strike carries
in the gulf, the USS Maddox and the USS Turner Joy. Documents and
tapes released via the Freedom of Information Act have since shown
that Johnson knew that there were no PT boats and no attacks, but still went
ahead with lying to the American public on national TV to garner support for
escalating the war in Vietnam. Johnson also had the NSA fake
intelligence data to make it appear as if the two US ships had
been lost.
Hart, one of the instigators of the Homeland
Security apparatus that has evolved since 9/11, then goes on to state that
American people are reluctant to go to war unless provoked and coldly remarks
"For historians of American wars the question is whether we provoke
provocations."
He then mentions the Iraq war and refers to how
the public were duped into accepting the invasion via the spectre of 9/11. Hart
writes "even in this instance, we were led to believe that the mass
murderer of American civilians, Osama bin Laden, was lurking, literally or
figuratively, in the vicinity of Baghdad."
To those who do not read history Gary Hart's
letter makes for a confusing read, but to those who know anything about staged
provocations, the intent is clear. Hart is declaring that the elite controlled
US government has attacked countries based on false pretenses in the past and
will gladly do so again.
Hart's declarations carry the same sentiment as
those of fellow globalist Zbigniew
Brzezinski earlier this year. The Former National Security Advisor
and founding member of the elite policy making group the Trilateral Commission
implicitly warned a Senate Foreign Relations Committee that an attack on Iran
could be launched following a staged provocation in Iraq or a false flag terror
attack within the U.S.
Brzezinski alluded to the potential for the Bush
administration to manufacture a false flag Gulf of Tonkin type incident in
describing a "plausible scenario for a military collision with Iran,"
which would revolve around "some provocation in Iraq or a terrorist act in
the US blamed on Iran, culminating in a ‘defensive’ US military action against
Iran that plunges a lonely America into a spreading and deepening quagmire
eventually ranging across Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan.”
Texas Congressman and Presidential
candidate Ron Paul has also recently warned that a "Gulf of
Tonkin like event" may be used to provoke air strikes on Iran as numerous
factors collide to heighten expectations that America may soon be embroiled in
its third war in six years.
Here is Gary Hart's letter in full:
Unsolicited Advice to the Government of
Iran
Presuming that you are not actually ignorant
enough to desire war with the United States, you might be well advised to read
the history of the sinking of the U.S.S. Maine in Havana harbor in 1898 and the
history of the Gulf of Tonkin in 1964.
Having done so, you will surely recognize that
Americans are reluctant to go to war unless attacked. Until Pearl Harbor, we
were even reluctant to get involved in World War II. For historians of American
wars the question is whether we provoke provocations.
Given the unilateral U.S. invasion of Iraq in
2003, you are obviously thinking the rules have changed. Provocation is no
longer required to take America to war. But even in this instance, we were led
to believe that the mass murderer of American civilians, Osama bin Laden, was
lurking, literally or figuratively, in the vicinity of Baghdad.
Given all this, you would probably be well
advised to keep your forces, including clandestine forces, as far away from the
Iraqi border as you can. You might even consider bringing in some neighbors to
verify that you are not shipping arms next door. Tone down the rhetoric on
Zionism. You've established your credentials with those in your world who
thrive on that.
If it makes you feel powerful to hurl
accusations at the American eagle, have at it. Sticks and stones, etc. But, for
the next sixteen months or so, you should not only not take provocative
actions, you should not seem to be doing so.
For the vast majority of Americans who seek no
wider war, in the Middle East or elsewhere, don't tempt fate. Don't give a
certain vice president we know the justification he is seeking to attack your
country. That is unless you happen to like having bombs fall on your head.
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