The Art of Obama's Wars
The United States can no longer afford to launch major wars like Korea, Vietnam or Iraq. Obama prefers to intensify secret military action.
Manlio Dinucci (*)lays out the plan.
President Obama does not like war. Not because he is a
Nobel Peace prize-winner, but because open aggressive action would reveal US
strategy and the interests upon which it is based. So he has launched a grand
plan which, as the Washinton Post notes, "reflects the Obama
administration’s affinity for espionage and covert action over conventional
force."
[as CIA men are trained to do; Obama - CIA trained and installed - is fulfilling chis mission...]
[as CIA men are trained to do; Obama - CIA trained and installed - is fulfilling chis mission...]
This plan is intended to restructure and reinforce the Defense Intelligence
Agency, which until now has been concentrated on the wars in Afghanistan and
Iraq, so that it can operate on a global scale as a "spy service focused on
emerging threats and more closely aligned with the CIA and elite military
commando units."
The first step will be to expand the organigram of the DIA, whose personnel
has been doubled over the last decade, and now numbers some 16,500 members. A
"new generation of clandestine operatives" will be formed, ready to be
sent overseas. They will be trained by the CIA in its centre in Virginia, known
as "The Farm", where secret agents are groomed – a number of new posts
will be created for the DIA pupils, totalling about 20% of the Farm’s
turnover.
The ever closer collaboration
between these two agencies is born out by the fact that the DIA has adopted a
few of the CIA’s internal structures, amongst others, a unit dubbed "Persia
House", which co-ordinates secret operations inside Iran.
The new DIA agents will also take a specialisation course directed by the
Commander of Special Operations. Apart from training recruits to eliminate the
enemy, he also teaches "non-conventional warfare" to be conducted by
exterior forces who are specially trained for this purpose;
"counter-insurrection", to help allied governments to repress rebellion;
and "psychological operations" intended to influence public opinion so
that the population comes to support US military action.
Once their training is complete, these new
DIA agents, about 1,600 at first, will be assigned by the Pentagon to missions
all over the world. The State Department will provide them with false
identities, introducing some of them into embassies - but since the embassies
are already full of CIA agents, the DIA agents will be given other false
identities, for example, as university
staff or business executives.
Thanks to their military experience, the
DIA agents are reputed to be more appropriate for the recruitment of informers
capable of providing data of a military nature, for example, information
concerning the new Chinese fighter plane. And the development of their
organigram will enable the DIA to expand the range of targets for drone strikes
and actions by special forces.
This is the new way of making war,
preparing and accompanying open attacks by secret action intended to weaken the
target country from inside, as was done in Libya, or undermine it internally, as
is being attempted in Syria. This is the direction taken by the restructured
DIA, launched by President Obama.
We don’t know if the candidate for Prime
Minister Pier Luigi Bersani [1], who holds Obama in great esteem, has already congratulated
him for this action. However, he has recently visited Libya in order to "pick
up the thread of a strong Italian presence in the Mediterranean". Meaning
the thread of war against Libya, in which Italy participated under US orders,
while Bersani rejoiced, exclaiming "it’s about time".
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(*)Manlio Dinucci is a geographer and geopolitical scientist. His latest books are Geograficamente. Per la Scuola media (3 vol.), Zanichelli (2008); Escalation. Anatomia della guerra infinita, DeriveApprodi (2005).
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