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182 lines
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182 lines
9.4 KiB
Plaintext
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FEMA's structure for fascist rule
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By Kathleen Klenetsky and Herbert Quinde
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"You have an authoritarian structure. . .with FEMA."
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--Harold Relyea, chief specialist on presidential
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directives at the Congressional Research Service,
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in an interview with EIR.
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The Federal Emergency Management Agency was founded during the presidency
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of one Trilateral Commission member, Jimmy Carter, and it seems
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increasingly likely that its fundamental purpose -- to seize control of the
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reins of government through emergency fiat -- will be realized under the
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presidency of another, George Bush.
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The Trilateral link is no accident. Together with the other leading
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Eastern Establishment think tank, the New York Council on Foreign Relations
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(CFR), the Trilateral Commission effectively brought FEMA into existence.
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The leading theoreticians behind the creation of FEMA were Samuel
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Huntington, a National Security Council consultant under Carter, and
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Zbigniew Brzezinski, who served as Carter's national security advisor.
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Before that, Brzezinski was executive director at the Trilateral
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Commission, a "New Ager" who envisioned a "technetronic society" in the
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United States. Nominally a Democrat, Brzezinski nevertheless became a
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leading adviser on strategic policy to George Bush's 1988 campaign, and
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continues to serve as an informal consultant to the Bush administration.
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Huntington is currently a member of the FEMA Advisory Board. Both
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Huntington and Brzezinski belong to the CFR.
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FEMA was established in March 1979 by presidential Review Memorandum 32,
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with the mandate to maintain "the continuity of government" (COG) during a
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national security emergency. PRM 32 bypassed the U.S. Constitution, and
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awarded power to the _unelected_ officials at the National Security Council
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to direct U.S. government operations by emergency decree. By placing FEMA
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under the NSC's control, Huntington, Brzezinski, et al., turning the NSC
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into a shadow technocratic dictatorship, waiting for a real or manufactured
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crisis to seize control of the country.
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Although FEMA was sold to Congress and the public as the vehicle through
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which the United States could mount an adequate, centralized response to
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natural and other disasters, the agency has consistently failed to fulfill
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that purpose. In its last major interventions, in 1989's San Francisco
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earthquake and Hurricane Hugo, FEMA's ineptness and bungling enraged
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disaster victims and local officials. FEMA was more interested in
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psychologically profiling the population's response to the disasters, than
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it was in assisting their physical survival. That was typical of FEMA's
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10-year record, which began with its panic-mongering handling of the Three
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Mile Island nuclear accident in 1979.
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Burying the Constitution
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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FEMA has proven by it's own actions that it is not a disaster preparedness
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agency. Its true purpose is found in the 1970s policy decisions of the CFR
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and the Trilateral Commission, decisions which ushered in the
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"post-industrial society" and "limits to growth" era which brought the
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United States into the current depression.
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It is clear from viewing these policy decisions, that the Establishment had
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made a conscious decision to deal with economic contraction and concomitant
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social unrest by resorting to fascist emergency rule and other forms of
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"fascism with a democratic face."
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In one of the earliest Trilateral Commission reports, "The Crisis of
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Democracy," published in 1975, Huntington demanded that democratic
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government be curbed in times of economic crisis. "We have come to
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recognize that there are potentially desirable limits to economic growth,"
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he stated. "There are also potentially desirable _limits to the indefinite
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extension of political democracy_. . . . A government which lacks
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authority. . .will have little ability, short or cataclysmic crisis to
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_impose on its people the sacrifice which may be necessary_" (emphasis
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added).
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In 1973, the Council of Foreign Relations launched its "1980s Project,"
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which it called the "largest single effort in our 55-year history." By its
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own account, the 1980s Project was aimed at "describing how world trends
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might be steered toward a particular desirable future outcome." Zbigniew
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Brzezinski belonged to the 1980s Project's governing body, and Samuel
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Huntington served on its coordinating group.
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Among the most important products of the project was _Alternatives to
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Monetary Disorder_, by the late Fred Hirsch, senior adviser to the
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International Monetary Fund. Hirsch wrote: "A degree of controlled
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disintegration in the world of economy is a legitimate objective for the
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1980s and may be order. A central normative problem for the international
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economic order in the years ahead is how to ensure that the disintegration
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indeed occurs in a controlled way and does not rather spiral into damaging
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restrictionism."
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"Controlled disintegration" became the policy of Jimmy Carter's Federal
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Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, whose high interest rates wrecked the U.S.
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industrial and farm base during the Carter and Reagan years.
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Another Key 1980s Project document was _International Disaster Relief_, by
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Stephen Green. It predicted that the future will bring about
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"megadisasters" that will "create conditions of political instability and,
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in all likelihood, of conflict, which will further erode the capacity of
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societies to cope with natural disasters."
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Green recommended rapid implementation of new disaster preparedness
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efforts. He called for the creation of a central, global agency, under the
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United Nations, with a mandate to intervene in disaster situations, despite
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opposition from local governments. "Such a shift," he wrote, "would
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reflect increasingly widespread _dissatisfaction with the constraints posed
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by the recognition of sovereign national jurisdictions" and the "abstract
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notion of national sovereignty" (emphasis added).
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"Disaster relief" thus became an excuse for tossing out existing forms of
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government which stand in the way of fascist economic policies (for which
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"sacrifice" and "controlled disintegration" are merely euphemisms) which
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the Eastern Establishment has decided must be imposed.
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Oliver North and FEMA
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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FEMA's powers have been enhanced during the Reagan and Bush administrations
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to the point that the agency is now positioned to take over the country in
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the event of a national security crisis, such as a war with Iraq or an
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interruption of oil-imports.
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A preview of FEMA dictatorship can be found in the Iran-Contra affair. One
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of the key components of the FEMA apparatus is a group of 100 persons it
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has positioned throughout the government bureaucracy. Known as the
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"continuity of government" (COG) structure, these 100 individuals are
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charged with running government departments in times of crisis. One member
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of this group was none other than Oliver North -- whom President Bush
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called a "national hero."
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Bush was at the center of both the Iran-Contra fiasco, and the broader
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FEMA-linked crisis management apparatus set up during the Reagan years. In
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early 1982, Reagan created the Special Situations Group (SSG), designating
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Vice President Bush as chairman.
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In May 1982, the Reagan administration is sued a memorandum which announced
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that the SSG "is charged, _inter alia_ with formulating plans in
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anticipation of crisis. In order to facilitate this crisis pre-planned
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responsibility, a Standing Crisis Pre-Planning Group (CPPG) is hereby
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established."
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North was assigned to the CPPG -- and later helped to write the 1984 "Rex"
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exercise for police-state rule in the United States.
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Through an outgrowth of this structure, the Iran-Contra controllers wielded
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extraordinary power and ran various foreign and domestic initiates,
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including the overthrow of President Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines
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through what became the Project Democracy apparatus, the Iran-Contra
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affair, and the government's effort to jail Lyndon LaRouche, who was
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rightly seen as a major threat to the FEMA network's "government by fiat"
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scheme. (As EIR has previously reported, Buster Horton, the foreman of the
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jury which found LaRouche guilty on trumped-up charges in December 1988,
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belonged to the same 100-man COG structure as North.)
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On July 22, 1982, President Reagan issued his National Security Decision
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Directive 47 to complement the operations of the SSG and CPPG. Titled
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"Emergency Mobilization Preparedness," NSDD 47 defined the responsibilities
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of federal departments and branches of the U.S. government to respond to a
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national security crisis or domestic emergency. The president charged the
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Emergency Mobilization Preparedness Board with implementing the programs
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detailed in the directive, which included a restriction of civil rights,
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bordering on explicit police-state measures (see accompanying article --
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"12656.TXT").
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As one of his first acts in office, Bush issued National Security Directive
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1, which boosted the powers of the National Security Council, the body that
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runs FEMA.
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Bush also stacked the FEMA leadership with "old boys" from the intelligence
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and covert operations networks, among them Jerry Jennings, who was
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confirmed as a FEMA deputy director in May. Jenning's background includes
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nearly a decade of White House service as an advisor to the President's
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national security adviser under four administrations, beginning in 1973.
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Before that, he worked with the CIA in the Far East during the gear up for
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the Vietnam War (1965-68), and for the FBI, where he specialized in drugs.
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EIR Nov 23, 1990 (pg.23)
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