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August
06, 2007

A
Piecemeal Prologue
Half of the American people believe that the Bush administration is on
the hunt for Al-Qaeda for the 9/11 attacks. Another half believe that
9/11 was a Bush administration inside job, attributable not to Al-Qaeda,
but to "Al-CIA-duh." Both halves, though, agree on one thing,
and aren't shy about saying it: This summer we are likely to suffer another
terror attack, a "911-2B."
The list of notables' quotables begins with the springtime warning of
the vice president to NBC's Tim Russert on Meet the Press:
April 15, 2007, Dick Cheney: "The greatest threat now is 'a 9/11'
occurring ... with a nuclear weapon in the middle of one of our own cities."
June 3, 2007, Dennis Milligan, Chairman of the Arkansas Republican Party:
"I believe fully the president is doing the right thing, and I think
all we need is some attacks on American soil like we had on [Sept. 11,
2001]."
July 1,
2007, ABC News: "A secret U.S. law enforcement report, prepared for
the Department of Homeland Security, warns that al Qaeda is planning a
terror "spectacular" this summer."
July 11, 2007, Michael Chertoff, Homeland Security chief: "I believe
we are entering a period this summer of increased risk."
July 20, 2007, Paul Craig Roberts, former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury:
"Whether authentic or orchestrated, an attack will activate Bush's
new executive orders [NSPD-51], which create a dictatorial police state
in event of national emergency."
July 24, 2007, Peter DeFazio, House Homeland Security Committee member:
"I just can't believe they're going to deny a member of Congress
the right of reviewing how they plan to conduct the government of the
United States after a significant terrorist attack . Maybe the people
who think there's a conspiracy out there are right."
A Recess Review
As Congress goes home for August, opinion polls show that roughly two
out of three American citizens either dislike or detest George W. Bush,
and things are rapidly falling apart for him. More and more White House
officials are invoking executive privilege to avoid answering the hard
questions of an exasperated legislative branch about them and their "unitary
executive." Alberto Gonzales is the object of a growing congressional
impeachment movement, as is Dick Cheney -- and half of the public wants
Bush impeached, too.
In the last two weeks the stock market has dropped by nearly a thousand
points, and threatens a bearish mauling of the financial sector that has
been the Bush administration's base and beneficiary.
His own Republicans are threatening to bail out on busted-down Iraq, unless
they get strong reassurances from General David Petraeus in mid-September.
The general's situation is hardly reassuring, though. Embattled Baghdad,
which he was sent to secure, is currently under fire and without water,
and Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is publicly calling for his removal.
Wednesday, August 1, could have been the worst day of all for the White
House. In the morning came the news that the Iraqi government had fallen
apart, with the Sunni faction quitting al-Maliki's cabinet. This disastrous
development was likely to hold the headlines until the end of the week,
when Congress would head home to discuss this latest war calamity with
already war-weary constituents.
A Minnesota Miracle
Wednesday afternoon could have added even more woes to the White House.
America's first and only Muslim congressman, Keith Ellison, appeared on
CNN's Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer to discuss some scorching anti-Bush
comments he had made on July 8 to constituents in Minneapolis, in which
he had compared 9/11 to the Reichstag Fire, and George Bush to Adolph
Hitler. In 1933 Hitler used the Reichstag Fire, carried out under his
orders, to establish a dictatorship in Germany.
Ellison's analysis is accepted by most of the Muslim world, much of the
non-Muslim world, and a growing minority of Americans. Rather than defend
it, though, Ellison backed down with apologies in his interview with Blitzer,
saying that his remarks were a "rookie mistake," never to be
repeated.
Perhaps Ellison's retreat from his remarks was an attempt to stave off
the disaster that frequently befalls those who disrupt the political paradigm.
If so, it didn't work. Two hours after Ellison's mea culpa, his congressional
district suffered a freak disaster with the collapse of the I-35 bridge
into the Mississippi River.
One man's loss is another's gain, though. In the news, the collapse of
the Minneapolis bridge supplanted the collapse of the al-Maliki government
and the Bush White House for the rest of Wednesday..., then Thursday...,
then Friday. By Saturday the congressman who had accused the unitary executive
of treason was with Bush himself, taking a tour of his afflicted district,
and begging for the relief of federal funds.
A Cowardly Congress
It's hard to fathom why the Democratic Congress would bow down to the
unitary executive before skipping town for summer vacation, but that's
just what they have done.
Last week Congress gave the White House the gift of expanded executive
power by its approval of the 9/11 Commission's recommendations, further
extending the reach of the unitary executive.
Friday, the Senate voted 60-28 in favor of granting Bush and Gonzales
more power to conduct domestic surveillance without the trouble of a court
warrant. The House followed suit Saturday, with a vote of 227-183.
A Dodging DeFazio
On the
same day that the Minneapolis bridge fell into the Mississippi, the White
House refused a written request by House Homeland Security chairman Bernie
Thompson and Oregon Congressman Peter DeFazio to read classified annexes
of NSPD-51, the presidential order, announced in May, by which Bush can
declare himself dictator in the event of a natural catastrophe like Katrina
-- or a terror attack like 9/11-2B.
DeFazio's Oregon is the target of "Noble Resolve," an upcoming
9/11-2B military exercise scheduled for August 20-24 that includes a nuclear
attack on Portland. Pacific Northwesterners are increasingly alarmed that
they may be the targets of a false flag nuclear attack, or the fallout
from it. You can't blame them. After all, according to all sources, left
and right, 911-2B is the only thing that can revitalize the war president
and the war plan.
Oregon's DeFazio is unfazed by it all, or pretends to be. Penny Dodge,
his chief of staff, refuses to answer questions from media about his failure.
DeFazio has taken to the Internet and airwaves to urge his constituents
to relax -- despite his inability to examine NSPD-51, and his unwillingness
to examine the possibility that they may be targets for a military exercise.
He urges trust in the motives of the unitary executive. In doing so DeFazio
fails in his duty, and acts the part of Bush's buffoon in a comedy of
terrors.

Captain May is a former Army military intelligence and public affairs
officer, as well as a former NBC editorial writer. His political and military
analyses have appeared in The Wall Street Journal, the Houston Chronicle
and Military Intelligence Magazine.
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Archives
Bush
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Wagging
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Operation
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Another
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The
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The
Four Pillars of Wisdom for 911 Truth
RED
ALERT: 9/11/06 (Chicago, Detroit & Houston)
UPDATE
to RED ALERT 9/11/06 (NASA, Ft. Monroe & Houston)
The
Devil in George W. Bush
King
George Bush and the Tortured Truth
Is
War with Iran the October Surprise?
Next
9/11, Summer, 2007?
Peter
DeFazio and the Portland Nuke
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