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ブッシュに鷹派がマニフェスト送りシリア・イラン・キューバ型の北朝鮮の政体変更求む
いわゆるネオコンの巻き返しですな。しかも、ヨーロッパ諸国に、フランスを取るか、アメリカを取るか、迫るとよ。
日経(2003.12.03)「対イラク、米強硬派内に溝」「ネオコン、国防長官を痛烈批判」「駐留軍縮小に反発」記事もある。この論調が、一般公開、日本の習慣ならば、いわゆる公開質問状の形式、「book」として、ブッシュに送りつけられた模様である。しかも、転載の情報源は、イギリスのテレグラフ報道で、大晦日なり。
しかも、しかも、その一ヶ月前に、戦争企業、カーライルが、テレグラフの買収を画策中の情報が、阿修羅戦争掲示板にも、以下のごとくに、流れていたのである。
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【どす黒い】カーライル・グループが英国のデイリー・テレグラフの買収を画策【戦争企業】
http://www.asyura2.com/0311/war43/msg/597.html
投稿者 小泉犬 日時 2003 年 11 月 28 日 22:20:55:tZgj1vEYtfiSU
ビンラディン・グループやサウジ王室との関係がひじょ〜に深く大悪党パパブッシュが特別顧問を務め、元CIA長官、国防長官を歴任したカールリッチが社長を勤め世界中の政財界で強い影響力を誇る人物が「天下り」する企業、カーライル・グループが英国のデイリー・テレグラフの買収を画策中。
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Carlyle Group ready to buy stakes in major newspapers
London Observer
A powerful banking group with close links to the Pentagon, which has also invested money on behalf of the Bin Laden family, is in talks to bail out beleaguered Daily Telegraph owner Conrad Black.
The revelation suggests that Britain's bestselling broadsheet - coveted by rival newspaper barons because of its political influence - may not go under the hammer after all, as Lord Black tries to quell a shareholder rebellion in the face of allegations that he and several acolytes pocketed millions of dollars that was not theirs to take.
Daily Express owner Richard Desmond and the Daily Mail & General Trust, which owns the Daily Mail, are keen to buy the Telegraph titles, despite the fact that questions over the concentration of media ownership would be raised.
The Carlyle Group, known as the Ex-Presidents Club because of the number of former world leaders it employs, is considering taking a stake in Hollinger International, which owns the Telegraph titles, the Jerusalem Post and the Chicago Sun-Times, according to those close to the firm.
[後略]
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http://www.masnet.org/articleinterest.asp?id=784
Hawks Tell Bush How to Win War on Terror
Date Posted: Wednesday, December 31, 2003
by David Rennie in Washington
The Telegraph (UK)
31/12/2003
President George W Bush was sent a public manifesto yesterday by Washington's hawks, demanding regime change in Syria and Iran and a Cuba-style military blockade of North Korea backed by planning for a pre-emptive strike on its nuclear sites.
The manifesto, presented as a "manual for victory" in the war on terror, also calls for Saudi Arabia and France to be treated not as allies but as rivals and possibly enemies.
The manifesto is contained in a new book by Richard Perle, a Pentagon adviser and "intellectual guru" of the hardline neo-conservative movement, and David Frum, a former Bush speechwriter. They give warning of a faltering of the "will to win" in Washington.
In the battle for the president's ear, the manifesto represents an attempt by hawks to break out of the post-Iraq doldrums and strike back at what they see as a campaign of hostile leaking by their foes in such centers of caution as the State Department or in the military top brass.
Their publication, An End to Evil: How to Win the War on Terror, coincided with the latest broadside from the hawks' enemy number one, Colin Powell, the secretary of state.
Though on leave recovering from a prostate cancer operation, Mr Powell summoned reporters to his bedside to hail "encouraging" signs of a "new attitude" in Iran and call for the United States to keep open the prospect of dialogue with the Teheran authorities.
Such talk is anathema to hawks like Mr Perle and Mr Frum who urge Washington to shun the mullahs and work for their overthrow in concert with Iranian dissidents.
It may be assumed that their instincts at least are shared by hawks inside the government, whose twin power bases are the Pentagon's civilian leadership and the office of the vice-president, Dick Cheney.
Such officials prevailed over invading Afghanistan and Iraq, but have been seen as on the back foot since the autumn as their post-war visions of building a secular, free-market Iraq were scaled back in favor of compromise and a swift handover of power next June.
The book demands that any talks with North Korea require the complete and immediate abandonment of its nuclear program.
As North Korea will probably refuse such terms, the book urges a Cuba-style military blockade and overt preparations for war, including the rapid pullback of US forces from the inter-Korean border so that they move out of range of North Korean artillery.
Such steps, with luck, will prompt China to oust its nominal ally, Kim Jong-il, and install a saner regime in North Korea, the authors write.
The authoritarian rule of Syria's leader, Bashar Assad, should also be ended, encouraged by shutting oil supplies from Iraq, seizing arms he buys from Iran, and raids into Syria to hunt terrorists.
The authors urge Mr Bush to "tell the truth about Saudi Arabia". Wealthy Saudis, some of them royal princes, fund al-Qa'eda, they write.
The Saudi government backs "terror-tainted Islamic organizations" as part of a larger campaign to "spread its extremist version of Islam throughout the Muslim world and into Europe and North America".
The book calls for tough action against France and its dreams of offsetting US power. "We should force European governments to choose between Paris and Washington," it states. Britain's independence from Europe should be preserved, perhaps with open access for British arms to American defense markets.