One insider aware of the Iraq plans, and knowledgeable about the      inevitably disastrous result of executing those plans, was      Richard Clarke, chief of counterterrorism for George W. Bush and      adviser to three presidents before him. He had spent September      11, 2001, in the White House, coordinating the nation’s response      to the attacks. He reports in his memoir, Against All Enemies,      discovering the next morning, to his amazement, that most      discussions there were about attacking Iraq.
  
   Clarke told Bush and Rumsfeld that Iraq had nothing to do with      9/11, or with its perpetrator, Al Qaeda. As Clarke said to      Secretary of State Colin Powell that afternoon, “Having been      attacked by al Qaeda, for us now to go bombing Iraq in      response”—which Rumsfeld was already urging—“would be like our      invading Mexico after the Japanese attacked us at Pearl Harbor.”    
  
   Actually, Clarke foresaw that it would be much worse than that.      Attacking Iraq not only would be a crippling distraction from      the task of pursuing the real enemy but would in fact aid that      enemy: “Nothing America could have done would have provided al      Qaeda and its new generation of cloned groups a better      recruitment device than our unprovoked invasion of an oil-rich      Arab country.”
   According to these reports, many high-level officers and      government officials are convinced that our president will      attempt to bring about regime change in Iran by air attack; that      he and his vice president have long been no less committed,      secretly, to doing so than they were to attacking Iraq; and that      his secretary of defense is as madly optimistic about the      prospects for fast, cheap military success there as he was in      Iraq.
  
   Even more ominously, Philip Giraldi, a former CIA official,      reported in The American Conservative a year ago that Vice      President Cheney’s office had directed contingency planning for      “a large-scale air assault on Iran employing both conventional      and tactical nuclear weapons” and that “several senior Air Force      officers” involved in the planning were “appalled at the      implications of what they are doing—that Iran is being set up      for an unprovoked nuclear attack—but no one is prepared to      damage his career by posing any objection.”
22 October, 2006
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