The ACPC later sanitized “Chechnya” to “Caucasus” so it’s rebranded
itself as the “American Committee for Peace in the Caucasus.”
Of course, Giuliani
also just happens to be one of several neocons and corrupt politicians
who took hundreds of thousands of dollars from MEK sources when that
Iranian group was listed by the U.S. State Department as a Foreign
Terrorist Organization (FTO). The money paid for these American
politicians to lobby (illegally under the Patriot Act) U.S. officials to
get MEK off the FTO list.
Giuliani and his ilk engage, behind the scenes, in all these
insidious operations but then blithely turn to the cameras to spew their
hypocritical propaganda fueling the counterproductive “war on terror”
for public consumption, when that serves their interests. Maybe this
explains Giuliani’s amazement (or feigned ignorance) on Friday morning
after the discovery that the family of the alleged Boston Marathon
bombers was from Chechnya.
My observations are not meant to be a direct comment about the
motivations of the two Boston bombing suspects whose thinking remains
unclear. It’s still very premature and counterproductive to speculate on
their motives.
But the lies and disinformation that go into the confusing and
ever-morphing notion of “terrorism” result from the U.S. Military
Industrial Complex (and its little brother, the “National Security
Surveillance Complex”) and their need to control the mainstream media’s
framing of the story.
So, a simplistic narrative/myth is put forth to sustain U.S. wars.
From time to time, those details need to be reworked and some of the
facts “forgotten” to maintain the storyline about bad terrorists “who
hate the U.S.” when, in reality, the U.S. Government may have nurtured
the same forces as “freedom fighters” against various “enemies.”
The bottom line is to never forget that “a poor man’s war is
terrorism while a rich man’s terrorism is war” – and sometimes those
lines cross for the purposes of big-power politics. War and terrorism
seem to work in sync that way.
Coleen Rowley is a retired FBI agent and former
chief division counsel in Minneapolis. She’s now a dedicated peace and
justice activist and board member of the Women Against Military Madness.
>>http://consortiumnews.com/2013/04/19/chechen-terrorists-and-the-neocons/
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