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SECRET BUSH PLAN TO SUSPEND US
CONSTITUTION
Several months before the September 11, 2001 terrorist
attacks, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld approved an
updated version of the U.S. Army's secret operational
Continuity of Government (COG) plans.
A draft document published by the whistleblowing website
Wikileaks entitled, "Army Regulation 500-3, Emergency
Employment of Army and Other Resources. Army Continuity
of Operations (COOP) Program," dated 19 January 2001,
spells out changes in Army doctrine.
Issued by Headquarters, Department of the Army and signed
off by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and the
Secretary of the Army, the document is affixed with a
warning: "Destruction Notice: Destroy by any method that
will prevent disclosure of contents or reconstruction of
the document." The restricted document as published by
Wikileaks states:
History. This regulation is a revision of the original
regulation that was effective on 10 July 1989. Since that
time, no changes have been published to amend the
original.
Summary. This regulation on the Army Continuity of
Operations (COOP) Program has been revised to update Army
COOP policy and extend the requirement for all-hazards
COOP planning to all Army organizations. Classified
information contained in the 1989 version of this AR has
been removed and placed in a classified HQDA Operations
Plan (OPLAN).
Applicability. This regulation applies to the Active
Army, the U.S. Army Reserve (USAR), and when federalized
to the Army National Guard (ARNG). In the event of
conflict between this regulation and approved OSD or JCS
publications, the provisions of the latter will apply.
("Army Regulation 500-3, Emergency Employment of Army and
Other Resources. Army Continuity of Operations (COOP)
Program," 19 January 2001, p. 3) [emphasis added]
"All-hazards COOP planning" is described as the means by
which "the Army remains capable of continuing
mission-essential operations during any situation,
including military attack, terrorist activities, and
natural or man-made disasters." While the Army stresses
the updates described in AR 500-3 relate to chemical,
biological, nuclear attacks, "natural disasters" and
"technical or man-made disasters or accidents," current
Army doctrine is also heavily weighted towards
contingency planning for "civil disturbances."
Two national "civil disturbance" plans, Garden Plot and
Cable Splicer have been operational since the 1960s.
Researcher Frank Morales has detailed how,
Under the heading of "civil disturbance planning," the
U.S. military is training troops and police to suppress
democratic opposition in America. The master plan,
Department of Defense Civil Disturbance Plan 55-2, is
code-named, "Operation Garden Plot". Originated in 1968,
the "operational plan" has been updated over the last
three decades, most recently in 1991, and was activated
during the Los Angeles "riots" of 1992, and more than
likely during the recent anti-WTO "Battle in Seattle."
...
Equipped with flexible "military operations in urban
terrain" and "operations other than war" doctrine, lethal
and "less-than-lethal" high-tech weaponry, US "armed
forces" and "elite" militarized police units are being
trained to eradicate "disorder", "disturbance" and "civil
disobedience" in America. Further, it may very well be
that police/military "civil disturbance" planning is the
animating force and the overarching logic behind the
incredible nationwide growth of police paramilitary
units, a growth which coincidentally mirrors rising
levels of police violence directed at the American
people, particularly "non-white" poor and working people.
(Frank Morales, "U.S. Military Civil Disturbance
Planning: The War at Home," in Police State America, ed.
Tom Burghardt, Toronto/Montreal: Arm The
Spirit/Solidarity, 2002, P. 59)
AR 500-3 should be viewed in this context. Plans for
Continuity of Government have been in place since the
1950s. Originally conceived during the Cold War when
fears of a nuclear strike envisaged by atomic war-gamers
at the RAND Corporation, believed that an immobilization
of government functions and a breakdown of civilian rule
would follow a nuclear attack. But from their inception,
COG planning has been shrouded in secrecy.
In addition to constructing nuclear-proof underground
facilities where the civilian leadership could escape a
decapitation strike, other COG provisions included a
series of executive orders designating which officials
would assume Cabinet-level posts and other Executive
Branch positions. Officials so designated would
constitute a "shadow government" should office holders be
killed in an attack "or otherwise incapacitated."
However, when these and other Pentagon "civil
disturbance" plans surfaced in the 1980s during the
Iran-Contra hearings, they were roundly criticized by
members of Congress, civil liberties groups and the media
before disappearing once again, down Orwell's "memory
hole." The inherent dangers implicit in such plans are
that unelected Executive Branch officers could assume the
Presidency and other appointed offices subject neither to
congressional scrutiny nor judicial oversight.
Exercising sweeping emergency powers buried within
Presidential Decision Directives (PDDs), unelected
officials could suspend the Constitution, declare martial
law and create an Executive Branch dictatorship that
rests solely on the power of the U.S. military.
Most troubling, Executive Branch officials under secret
rules of a COG regime could suppress and usurp the lawful
powers of Congress and the Judicial Branch (by force of
arms if deemed necessary) as a means of ensuring
"cooperation" under a "unitary executive."
As we have seen, the "unitary executive" theory has been
a salient feature of Bushist rule since the December 2000
judicial coup d'état, when the Supreme Court's Bush v.
Gore decision handed a contested election to George W.
Bush by stopping the vote count in Florida.
Since assuming office, the administration has ruthlessly
wielded executive power in order to achieve their
antidemocratic agenda: from the looting of the economy
through "deregulation," massive deficit spending and tax
cuts for their corporate "clients," to waging a
preemptive war of conquest in Iraq, the "unitary
executive" has systematically shredded America's
constitutional system of checks and balances.
The Bush administration put COG plans into operation for
the first time in U.S. history in the hours directly
following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. They
have never been rescinded.
Their implementation involves a rotating staff of 75-150
senior government officials and others from every Cabinet
department in two "secure, undisclosed locations" on the
East Coast. However, key congressional representatives
have been kept out of the loop and House and Senate
leaders have said they were not informed the "shadow
government" had "gone live."
So secretive are Bush administration plans that Peter
DeFazio (D-OR), a member of the House Committee on
Homeland Security, was denied access in 2007 to the
classified version of the COG plans contained in top
secret Presidential Decision Directive annexes. This too,
is unprecedented.
While the Bush administration admitted that COG was
activated in 2001, their disclosure came only after The
Washington Post broke the story based on confidential
administration sources troubled by the scope of the
program and its secretive implementation.
Since the late 1980s, Rumsfeld was a habitué of COG
exercises along with Vice President Dick Cheney. Indeed
early COG drills had been organized by the right-wing
Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS). As
investigative journalist Andrew Cockburn revealed in his
definitive political biography of the former Defense
Secretary:
This highly secret program was known as Project 908, and
among the individuals earmarked to take power when
disaster struck was Donald Rumsfeld. ... There, for
several days, he would be immured in artificial caverns,
staring at electronic displays streaming data of disaster
and confusion, sleeping on cots and subsisting on the
most austere rations. ...
Insofar as the COG games gave the illusion of reality,
they taught Rumsfeld and his fellow players some
dangerous lessons, particularly when the fall of the
Soviet Union induced some changes in the usual scenarios.
Although the exercises continued, still budgeted at over
$200 million in the Clinton era, the vanished Soviets
were now customarily replaced by terrorists. The
terrorism envisaged however, was almost always
state-sponsored. ...
There were other changes, too. In earlier times the
specialists selected to run the "shadow government" had
been drawn from across the political spectrum, Democrats
and Republicans alike. But now, down in the bunkers,
Rumsfeld found himself in politically congenial company,
the players' roster being filled almost exclusively with
Republican hawks. (Andrew Cockburn, Rumsfeld: His Rise,
Fall, and Catastrophic Legacy, New York: Scribner, 2007,
pp. 85-86, 88)
As researcher Peter Dale Scott revealed, in early 2006
the Department of Homeland Security awarded a $385
million contract to a Halliburton subsidiary, KBR, to
provide "temporary detention and processing facilities."
Scott wrote,
The contract--announced Jan. 24 by the engineering and
construction firm KBR--calls for preparing for "an
emergency influx of immigrants, or to support the rapid
development of new programs" in the event of other
emergencies, such as "a natural disaster." The release
offered no details about where Halliburton was to build
these facilities, or when. ...
After 9/11, new martial law plans began to surface
similar to those of FEMA in the 1980s. In January 2002
the Pentagon submitted a proposal for deploying troops on
American streets. One month later John Brinkerhoff, the
author of the 1982 FEMA memo, published an article
arguing for the legality of using U.S. troops for
purposes of domestic security. (Peter Dale Scott,
"Homeland Security Contracts for Vast New Detention
Camps," Pacific News Service, February 8, 2006)
The DHS contract to KBR had been preceded by the April
2002 creation of the Pentagon's Northern Command (NORTHCOM),
specifically empowered by the Bush administration for
domestic U.S. military operations in direct violation of
Posse Comitatus prohibitions forbidding the use of the
military for domestic law enforcement. At the time,
Defense Secretary Rumsfeld called NORTHCOM's launch "the
most sweeping set of changes since the unified command
system was set up in 1946."
Sweeping indeed! Last month Army Times reported that the
Army's "3rd Infantry Division's 1st Brigade Combat Team [BCT]
has spent 35 of the last 60 months in Iraq patrolling in
full battle rattle, helping restore essential services
and escorting supply convoys. Now they're training for
the same mission--with a twist--at home." According to
Army Times,
Beginning Oct. 1 for 12 months, the 1st BCT will be under
the day-to-day control of U.S. Army North, the Army
service component of Northern Command, as an on-call
federal response force for natural or manmade emergencies
and disasters, including terrorist attacks. ...
But this new mission marks the first time an active unit
has been given a dedicated assignment to NorthCom, a
joint command established in 2002 to provide command and
control for federal homeland defense efforts and
coordinate defense support of civil authorities. ...
They may be called upon to help with civil unrest and
crowd control or to deal with potentially horrific
scenarios such as massive poisoning and chaos in response
to a chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear or
high-yield explosive, or CBRNE, attack. ...
The 1st BCT's soldiers also will learn how to use "the
first ever nonlethal package that the Army has fielded,"
1st BCT commander Col. Roger Cloutier said, referring to
crowd and traffic control equipment and nonlethal weapons
designed to subdue unruly or dangerous individuals
without killing them.
"It's a new modular package of nonlethal capabilities
that they're fielding. They've been using pieces of it in
Iraq, but this is the first time that these modules were
consolidated and this package fielded, and because of
this mission we're undertaking we were the first to get
it."
The package includes equipment to stand up a hasty road
block; spike strips for slowing, stopping or controlling
traffic; shields and batons; and, beanbag bullets. (Gina
Cavallaro, "Brigade Homeland Tours Start Oct. 1," Army
Times, September 8, 2008)
While senior Pentagon brass have downplayed the
significance of deploying a BCT that has taken part in
aggressive occupation duties to suppress the Iraqi
people's resistance, Col. Lou Vogler, NORTHCOM's chief of
future operations said in an interview that the military
"will integrate with law enforcement to understand the
situation and make sure we're aware of any threats." An
article published by the Army News Service disclosed,
During the exercise, commanders and staff of the force
will train, rehearse and exercise--from academic classes
to making decisions and executing orders--all to help
prepare them for the mission they will assume on Oct. 1,
said Vogler.
"It's an opportunity for network building in an
unprecedented assignment of forces," said [Marine Corps
Lt. Col.] Shores. "DOD always had allocated contingency
sourced forces--but this is precedent-setting network
building with the forces that we ultimately will go out
and execute with. It's an opportunity to get to know our
forces, to see them in execution, to mission-orient them
and be that much better--to be that much more
responsive."
One goal of the exercise is to exercise with partners
from the civilian agencies they would support. To that
end, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and
other interagency representatives are participating to
ensure integration with civilian consequence managers who
would lead a response, said Vogler.
"The overall federal response builds on the local and
state response in accordance with the incident command
system and existing plans and processes that are out
there," said Vogler. "The response force would supplement
local efforts." ("Consequence Management Response Force
to join Army Northern Command," Army News Service,
September 15, 2008)
Vogler and Shores were discussing an exercise code-named
Vibrant Response, that took place September 8-19 at Fort
Stewart in Georgia. Three brigades form the core of
NORTHCOM's Consequence Management Response Force: the 1st
Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Army Division; the 1st Medical
Brigade, Fort Hood, Texas, and the 82nd Combat Aviation
Brigade, Fort Bragg, North Carolina. All three units
participated in Vibrant Response.
As researcher and analyst Michel Chossudovsky comments:
The BCT is an army combat unit designed to confront an
enemy within a war theater.
With US forces overstretched in Iraq, why would the
Pentagon decide to undertake this redeployment within the
USA, barely one month before the presidential elections?
The new mission of the 1st Brigade on US soil is to
participate in "defense" efforts as well as provide
"support to civilian authorities".
What is significant in this redeployment of a US infantry
unit is the presumption that North America could, in the
case of a national emergency, constitute a "war theater"
thereby justifying the deployment of combat units.
The new skills to be imparted consist in training 1st BCT
in repressing civil unrest, a task normally assumed by
civilian law enforcement.
What we are dealing with is a militarization of civilian
police activities in derogation of the Posse Comitatus
Act. ("Pre-election Militarization of the North American
Homeland. US Combat Troops in Iraq repatriated to 'help
with civil unrest'," Global Research, September 26, 2008)
One scenario envisaged by Chossudovsky is that "civil
unrest resulting from from the financial meltdown is a
distinct possibility, given the broad impacts of
financial collapse on lifelong savings, pension funds,
homeownership, etc."
One might reasonably inquire, what "precedent-setting
network" does the Army have in mind that would "ensure
integration" with "civilian agencies" such as FEMA (a
branch of Homeland Security)? As the World Socialist Web
Site reports:
It is noteworthy that the deployment of US combat troops
"as an on-call federal response force for natural or
manmade emergencies and disasters"--in the words of the
Army Times--coincides with the eruption of the greatest
economic emergency and financial disaster since the Great
Depression of the 1930s.
Justified as a response to terrorist threats, the real
source of the growing preparations for the use of US
military force within America's borders lies not in the
events of September 11, 2001 or the danger that they will
be repeated. Rather, the domestic mobilization of the
armed forces is a response by the US ruling establishment
to the growing threat to political stability. (Bill Van
Auken, "Army deploys combat unit in U.S. for possible
civil unrest," World Socialist Web Site, 25 September
2008)
As the 2001 COOP planning document describes, a host of
on-going Army plans and exercises have been revised by
the Bush administration. In addition to Vibrant Response
discussed above, they include: Plan EXCALIBUR, a COG Army
training exercise; ADOBE, described by investigative
journalist William M. Arkin as a "FEMA continuity of
government special access program designation." Arkin
describes special access programs or SAPs as,
Classified research and development, acquisition program,
operation, intelligence activity, or plan that is so
sensitive or critical that the value of the information
warrants enhanced protection beyond that normally
provided for access to Confidential, Secret, or Top
Secret information. (William M. Arkin, Code Names:
Deciphering U.S. Military Plans, Programs, and Operations
in the 9/11 World, Hanover, NH: Steerforth Press, 2005,
p. 598)
The impetus for revising Army COOP was, according to AR
500-3 primarily because,
The end of the Cold War and the breakup of the former
Soviet Union significantly reduced the probability of a
major nuclear attack on CONUS but the probability of
other threats has increased. Army organizations must be
prepared for any contingency with a potential for
interruption of normal operations. To emphasize that Army
continuity of operations planning is now focused on the
full all-hazards threat spectrum, the name "ASRRS" has
been replaced by the more generic title "Continuity of
Operations (COOP) Program." (p. 13)
Towards this end, the Rumsfeld-era document states that
the Army's new "mission-critical" functions will be
restructured so that, "Army COOP plans must ensure that
the Army remains capable of continuing mission-essential
operations during any situation, including military
attack, terrorist activities, and natural or man-made
disasters." (p. 13) The Army, following various
contingencies analyzed in the document will "coordinate
with mission-essential external organizations and
agencies." (p. 14)
So sensitive are the political ramifications of these
plans that under the heading, 3-12 Operational Security (OPSEC),
the Army avers,
a. The success of COOP planning relies on denying access
by unauthorized parties to information on COOP plans,
procedures, capabilities and facilities.
b. Overhead imagery, signals intelligence, human sources,
and exploitation of open literature during peacetime are
threat capabilities used to gain knowledge of Army
emergency plans, command and control systems, and
facilities.
c. See Appendix B, Security Classification Guide, for
guidance on the level of classification of COOP-related
information. (COOP, op. cit., p. 20)
Appendix A of AR 500-3 lists relevant references for
changes included in the COOP planning document. These
include:
Section I
Required Publications
HQDA Operations Plan EXCALIBUR, 30 April 1999 (Being
Revised)
HQDA Continuity of Operations Plan (cited in para 1-4.f)
Section II
Related Publications a related publication is merely a
source of additional information. The user does not have
to read it to understand this publication.
Executive Order 12656
National Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP), 18
November 1988
DoD Directive (Dodd) 2000.12
DoD Antiterrorism/Force Protection (AT/FP) Program, 13
April 1999
CJCSM 3410.01
Continuity of Operations Plan for the Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff (COOP-CJCS), 1 March 1999
Executive Order 12787
Prescribing the Order of Succession of Officers to Act as
Secretary of Defense, 31 December 1991
DoDD 3020.26
Continuity of Operations (COOP) Policy and Planning, 26
May 1995
DoD 3020.26P
Continuity of Operations Plan, 21 June 2000 (Classified
SECRET)
DoDD 3020.36
Assignment of National Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)
Responsibilities to DoD Components, 2 November 1988
DoDD 3025.15
Military Support to Civil Authorities (MSCA), 18 February
1997
The Federal Response Plan, April 1999
Presidential Decision Directive (PDD) 67, (Top Secret)
Enduring Constitutional Government (ECG) and Continuity
of Government (COG) Operations, Oct 21, 1998
Federal Preparedness Circular 65, Federal Executive
Branch Continuity of Operations, (COOP), July 26, 1999
As Peter Dale Scott reported in CounterPunch, apparently
members of Congress are considered "unauthorized parties"
to be denied access "to information on COOP plans,
procedures, capabilities and facilities." Congressman
DeFazio had been denied access to the classified annexes
of National Security and Homeland Security Presidential
Directive (NSPD 51/HSPD 20) Scott wrote,
NSPD 51 contains "classified Continuity Annexes" which
shall "be protected from unauthorized disclosure."
Congressman DeFazio twice requested to see these Annexes,
the second time in a letter cosigned by House Homeland
Security Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson and Oversight
Subcommittee Chairman Christopher Carney. It was these
requests that the White House denied. ...
DeFazio's inability to get access to the NSPD Annexes is
less than reassuring. If members of the Homeland Security
Committee cannot enforce their right to read secret plans
of the Executive Branch, then the systems of checks and
balances established by the U.S. Constitution would seem
to be failing.
To put it another way, if the White House is successful
in frustrating DeFazio, then Continuity of Government
planning has arguably already superseded the Constitution
as a higher authority. (Peter Dale Scott, "The Showdown,"
CounterPunch, March 31, 2008)
With the stunning revelations published by Wikileaks, it
is abundantly clear that top Bush administration
officials were busily revising Continuity of Government
plans, including "civil disturbance" contingencies for
suspending the Constitution and imposing martial law,
long before the 9/11 attacks.
Since that fatal and tragic day seven long years ago, we
have been told repeatedly by the government and their
media sycophants that 9/11 was the day "when everything
changed."
We now know thanks to Wikileaks, that as with the
invasion and occupation of Iraq, the unprecedented and
lawless surveillance of Americans, the illegal detention
and torture of prisoners of war, that Bush administration
assertions are no more than a pack of murderous lies.
One fact is abundantly clear from the mass of conflicting
evidence and assertions made by proponents of various
theories surrounding the 9/11 events: AR 500-3
demonstrates that from the very first moments after being
installed in office, the Bush regime was involved in a
"controlled demolition" of the U.S. Constitution.
Here are links to: The
draft document from 2001 The
final version as printed by the US Army
Original article at:
http://worldunreality.blogspot.com:80/2008/10/secret-bush-plan-to-suspend-us.html |