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Bush,
Kerry, and the CFR, It's All In The Family
Axis
of Logic | October 2 2004
George Walker Bush and John Forbes Kerry are wealthy members of
the upper class. They are both multimillionaires born into privilege,
educated in the finest New England private schools, and holding
memberships in the most exclusive private clubs.
The wealth of the Bush-Walker family comes from oil, banking, sports
teams, and the military-industrial complex. Historically, they have
been economically connected to the Rockefeller and Harriman families.
Exact figures are hard to come by, but the current president’s
personal wealth has been estimated at $10 to $26 million. Bush family
wealth would, of course, be much greater.
Kerry is part of the Boston Brahmin Forbes family, historically
intermarried with prominent New England families like the Winthrops,
Lowells, Cabots, and Emersons. The Kerry-Forbes family wealth comes
from land ownership and John Kerry’s marriage to Teresa Heinz,
who controls the Heinz foods fortune. Largely as a result of this
marriage, Kerry’s personal wealth is estimated to range from
$165 to $839 million.
As his father did, George W. Bush graduated from Phillips Academy
in Andover, Massachusetts, an exclusive preparatory school. As a
youth, John F. Kerry went to a Swiss boarding school and to the
prestigious St. Paul’s preparatory school in Concord, New
Hampshire. Both Bush and Kerry went on to Yale University and both
were members of Skull and Bones, an elite secret society and the
most exclusive social club at Yale. Bush vacations at Camp David,
at the family retreat at Kennebunkport, Maine, or at his Texas “ranch,”
a site purchased and built specifically for political purposes.
Kerry flies around the country in his $35 million Gulfstream V private
jet, cruises on his $800,000, 42-foot speedboat, or vacations in
one of the five multimillion dollar houses he and Teresa Heinz-Kerry
own. (These five houses are collectively worth $29.5 million according
to the May 3, 2004 issue of Newsweek.)
The running mates of these two candidates are also very wealthy:
Vice President Richard Cheney’s fortune is estimated at about
$50 million and vice presidential candidate John Edwards’s
at $12 to $60 million. Forbes magazine remarked that this year’s
presidential election has “probably the richest set of candidates
in U.S. history…maybe the first time in history when all four
major-party candidates could afford to work for free.”
The CFR & the Ruling Class
One of the prime characteristics of the U.S. upper class is its
high level of organization. One of the central organizations, accurately
called “the citadel of America’s establishment,”
is the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR). Founded in 1921, the
CFR is the most influential of all private policy planning groups.
Its great strength is mainly exercised behind the scenes and stems
from its unique position among policy groups: it is simultaneously
both a think tank for foreign and economic policy and also has a
large membership comprising some of the most important individuals
in U.S. economic, intellectual, and political life. The Council
has a yearly budget of about $30 million and a staff of over 200.
The CFR’s think tank consists of three overlapping activities.
One is convening an “influential forum,” mainly held
in New York and Washington, DC, where senior government and corporate
leaders, prominent intellectuals, and foreign dignitaries meet with
Council members to discuss and debate the U.S. role in the world
and the strategy and tactics required to accomplish U.S. goals.
Another think tank function is organizing and implementing a wide-ranging
studies program where CFR fellows draw on members and others to
collectively study a foreign policy issue. The result of this work
is then reported and often presented to government officials as
policy recommendations. Council employees and members are often
tapped to serve in the federal government in appointed positions,
although a number also serve as elected officials, especially at
the higher levels. Finally, the CFR publishes Foreign Affairs magazine,
which often prints study group recommendations written by a prominent
CFR fellow or member and in this way shapes policy debates as they
emerge.
The Council’s second key source of power, its membership
function, is more informal, involving a network of almost 4,200
members from many backgrounds and professions. Membership in the
Council is by invitation only: a potential member must be a U.S.
citizen who has been nominated and seconded by other CFR members
and elected by the Board of Directors. Two-thirds live in the New
York and Washington, DC areas. Fully 31 percent (1,299 individuals)
are from the corporate (“business”) sector, with another
25 percent (1,071 individuals) coming from varied academic settings
(professors, university administrators, researchers, fellows). Nonprofits
contribute 15 percent (640), government 13 percent (541), law 8
percent (319), the media 6 percent (248), and “other”
2 percent (74). Members pay a yearly fee on a sliding scale, depending
on age, occupation, and residence.
There is also a special category of corporate membership: executives
from 200 “leading international companies representing a range
of sectors” participate in special CFR programs. Corporations
representing capital in its most abstract forms—the financial
sector, the largest commercial and investment banks, insurance companies,
and strategic planning corporations—are most heavily represented
in the Council. Petroleum, military, and media companies also have
fairly close connections. A review of director lists of major corporations
found that the following corporations have at least three of their
directors who are also CFR members:
American Insurance Group and Citigroup: Eight directors
J.P. Morgan Chase, Boeing: Six directors
The Blackstone Group, Conoco, Disney/ABC: Five directors
Kissinger-McLarty Associates, IBM, Exxon Mobil, Dow Jones/Wall Street
Journal, Viacom/CBS, Time Warner: Four directors
The Carlyle Group, Lehman Brothers, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs,
Merrill Lynch, Credit Suisse First Boston. Washington Post/Newsweek,
Chevron Texaco, Lockheed Martin, Halliburton, Alliance Capital:
Three directors
The Council’s membership network consists of people one would
expect to be CFR members—David Rockefeller, Henry Kissinger,
Peter G. Peterson, George Soros, Maurice Greenberg, Robert Rubin,
George P. Shultz, Alan Greenspan, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Richard B.
Cheney, and George Tenet—as well as individuals whose membership
is more unexpected, such as John Sweeney, Jessie Jackson, Jimmy
Carter, Bill Clinton, Katrina vanden Heuvel, Richard J. Barnet,
and Daniel Schorr.
Bush, Kerry, and the CFR
Both Bush and Kerry are close to the CFR, draw most of their top
foreign and economic policy advisers from this elite organization,
and receive significant political funding from a number of Council-related
individuals. While Bush is not personally a member of the CFR, his
father was a member and a director of the Council in the 1970s and
a large number of key members of his Administration are members.
These include the so-called “neo-conservatives” who
first became prominent in the CFR in the 1980s, when Reagan was
president, and who have continued to play an important role since
then. One of the key neo-con groups, Project for the New American
Century, established in 1997 and identified by many as being the
central organization behind the Bush administration, is heavily
connected to the CFR. Fully 17 of the 25 founders of the Project
for the New American Century are Council members.
CFR members who support Bush include key advisers or government
officials in his Administration and also some key fundraisers who
have helped make the Bush campaign fund by far the largest in the
history of U.S. politics (see Table I). In John Kerry’s case,
he is not only a long-time member (over 10 years) of the CFR, Teresa
Heinz-Kerry is also a member. He has an even longer list of prominent
Council supporters than Bush. Many of these supporters are economic
and foreign policy advisers likely to play key roles in any Kerry
presidency. Five current CFR directors and one current employee
are openly supporting Kerry, most of them in advisory roles (see
Table II).
Keeping Iraq out of the U.S. Elections
At the end of March 2004, two corporate leaders—former Secretary
of Defense and CIA Director James R. Schlesinger and former State
Department official and Ambassador Thomas R. Pickering—published
an op-ed piece in the Los Angeles Times entitled “Keep Iraq
Above Politics.” In this article, Schlesinger (now the chair
of Mitre Corporation) and Pickering (senior vice president of Boeing
Corporation) argued that the current presidential candidates must
“rise above partisanship,” and “reaffirm their
willingness to sustain our financial and military commitment”
to Iraq in the “months and years ahead.” They suggested
that the fundamentals of the U.S. government’s Iraq policy
should not be subject to open democratic discussion and debate in
this year’s presidential election. They put forth this argument
because of weak public support at a time when “the United
States has no alternative to remaining deeply engaged in Iraq. Failure
to do so...could lead to long-term instability in the production
and supply of oil” and “would also represent a monumental
policy failure for the United States, with an attendant loss of
U.S. credibility, power and influence in the region and the world.”
This summary of the real reasons for going to war is not just Schlesinger’s
and Pickering’s personal views. A closer look reveals that
these two men were co-chairs of an “Independent Task Force
on Post-Conflict Iraq,” sponsored by the CFR. Both Schlesinger
and Pickering are prominent members of the Council; Pickering is
also a CFR director. Twenty other individuals, almost all of them
Council members, studied and discussed this topic for more than
three months prior to issuing their report, which was completed
just prior to the publication of the Schlesinger-Pickering Los Angeles
Times article. The task force members included leaders of corporations,
academic institutions, think tanks, law firms, elite policy planning
groups, non-governmental organizations, as well as former top government
officials and military officers.
The Council report, entitled “Iraq: One Year After,”
not only contained the above quote found in the Los Angeles Times
article, it also stressed “the geopolitical stakes”
involved in Iraq, but did not spell out what it meant by this term.
It is likely that the CFR report did not elaborate because its readers
in ruling class circles already know the meaning of “geopolitical
stakes” and agree on their importance. In addition, the Council
is undoubtedly extremely sensitive about being charged with advocating
war and colonial occupation in order to seize the world’s
main oil supplies. Geopolitics has to do with the ongoing worldwide
struggle among nation-states and other actors for economic, political,
and military power. Since Iraq does not have significant industry,
a large population, a powerful military, or strategic position along
sea or air routes, the reference to “geopolitical stakes”
can only mean Iraqi and Middle Eastern oil wealth and the significance
of this “prize” for corporate profits, political power,
and global strategic advantage. The CFR’s website (www.cfr.org)
also had this statement in April 2004: “The United States
is the world’s largest consumer of oil.... Much of the world’s
oil lies beneath Iraq and its Gulf neighbors...experts say oil played
a significant role in the decision to confront Iraq. The United
States has a long-standing interest in the free flow of oil from
the Persian Gulf….”
The Iraq war, however, has had multiple goals. In addition to seeking
control of oil for general strategic and specific economic value,
including increasing the profits of some corporations, the United
States is also trying to use the control of oil to favorably reshape
political and military relations with Europe and Asia. Important
nations—like France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and China—also
depend on Middle Eastern oil for their energy requirements and economic
survival. The U.S. is especially trying to prevent China from becoming
the center of a cohesive regional political economy, while trying
to transform it into a U.S. dependency. U.S. control over oil supplies
that China needs would give it a potentially decisive form of power
over China.
Emerging Tactics in U.S. Policy
Since the years immediately following World War II, there has been
a general CFR-promoted unity regarding the goals of foreign policy
and domestic economic policy within the United States ruling class.
Abroad, the U.S. has worked to create and preserve a system of worldwide
economic, political, and military dependencies/protectorates. This
system initially was used to “contain” the Eurasian
and Latin American left, but has evolved into a welfare system for
United States-based multinational corporations. Under this system,
the U.S. corporate state has been given effective control over many
of the internal and external policies of its dependent client states,
laying down the pro-corporate economic and political rules that
they must follow. These rules on open markets and open investments—including
dollar dominance, IMF/World Bank policies, huge capital flows into
the United States, and the correct pricing of oil—have greatly
benefited corporations controlled by the U.S. ruling class, helping
make them the world’s most powerful economic actors. Domestic
policy at home has focused on creating a massive welfare state for
corporations even as the minimal welfare state benefiting the majority
of the people was dismantled.
While the goals of this Pax Americana have been bi-partisan, there
have often been disagreements over tactics. Some of these disputes
have revolved around advantage for one or another party in the political
arena. The Bush administration’s preemptive war on Iraq is
one such case. The failures of preemption in Iraq have created an
opening for the Democrats to gain political advantage by criticizing
Bush’s tactics in much the same way that Eisenhower took advantage
of Truman and Stevenson on Korea and Nixon benefited from the unpopularity
of the Kennedy/Johnson war on Vietnam. Since most Democrats supported
the Iraq war, and both Kerry and Edwards voted for it and support
the occupation, they clearly do not disagree with the attempt to
take over Iraq and its oil resources, only the failure to succeed.
The failure of the Bush administration’s reactionary policies
of preemptive war abroad and tax cuts for the rich and general repression
at home have helped create the beginnings of an oppositional force
within the U.S. This force is mainly rank and file and has mass
potential, but is still unorganized. Abroad, in the poverty-stricken
ghettos of the world, anti-Americanism is rapidly growing. The more
moderate and liberal forces within the U.S. ruling class, including
an important sector of the Council on Foreign Relations, want a
tactical policy that focuses more on legitimating the system and
less on direct accumulation for corporations and the already wealthy.
They hope that such a focus and related concessions to those rebelling,
or beginning to rebel, at home and abroad will contain the opposition
and channel it in benign directions. Kerry is their candidate and
their tactics for the future can be seen in his policy statements,
those of his advisers, and those in the CFR and related organizations
who have openly opposed Bush admin- istration policies.
Kerry’s statements on Iraq, foreign policy, and economic
policy are illuminating. They illustrate that tactical differences
are all that separate him from George W. Bush on the key questions
of the occupation of Iraq and domestic economic policy. Prior to
the war on Iraq, John Kerry made statements showing that he had
the same policy goals as Bush and the Republicans: “The threat
of Saddam Hussein with weapons of mass destruction is real…without
question, we need to disarm Saddam Hussein…. He presents a
particularly grievous threat…” Just after the war started,
Kerry stated that U.S. armed forces will conquer Saddam “and
I support their doing so.” Kerry has stated that Bush’s
utopian goal of attempting to forcibly remake Iraq and the Middle
East in “America’s” image is his own. He has said,
“We must help bring modernity to the greater Middle East,”
adding that the countries of the region “suffer from too little
globalization, not too much.” As the latest colonial occupation
of Iraq developed into a quagmire, Kerry stated, “The stakes
in Iraq couldn’t be higher,” “failure is not an
option,” and that we must “finish the mission in Iraq.”
He says, “If our commanders believe they need more American
troops…they should get them.” Kerry also adds in his
speeches that a “peacekeeping force will be needed in Iraq
for a long time to come.” On domestic economic policy, Kerry
wants tax cuts for corporations as a way to stimulate economic growth
and the creation of jobs. He says he will reduce the taxes of 99
percent of U.S. corporations. While Bush offers tax cuts directly
to the rich, Kerry would offer tax cuts to the same people, but
indirectly through corporate tax cuts.
On foreign policy generally, Kerry, like Bush, believes in militarism
and war as a main way to solve the world’s problems. In May
2004, Kerry said, “America must always be the world’s
paramount military power…. As president, I will never hesitate
to use American power to defend our interests anywhere in the world.
I will make America’s armed forces even stronger by adding
troops…. I will modernize our military to match its new missions.”
Finally, Kerry would partner with NATO and the United Nations and
use more diplomacy and offer greater concessions to European and
other nations to convince them to share the burden of successfully
conquering Iraq. The Bush administration has, of course, already
attempted to go substantially in this direction (“alliance
building”) due to its problems in overcoming Iraqi resistance
to colonial occupation.
The most comprehensive statement of the projected alternative foreign
policy strategy of Kerry and the Democrats was produced by Kerry
adviser and Council member Sandy Berger and published in the May-June
2004 issue of Foreign Affairs. Berger, Clinton’s National
Security Adviser, begins by praising Bush’s stated goals in
the Middle East, adding, “The foreign policy debate in this
year’s presidential election is as much about means as it
is about ends.” Berger says that Democrats agree with Bush
that for “the foreseeable future, the United States and its
allies must be prepared to employ raw military and economic power
to check the ambitions of those who threaten our interests. A posture
of strength and resolve…are clearly the right approach for
dealing with our adversaries…” But Berger critiques
the “with us or against us” mentality guiding the way
that Bush has tried to force other nations to join the U.S. effort.
This tactical approach, along with Bush’s dismissal of the
need for the legitimacy that UN authorization and involvement would
have bestowed, is what Berger views as threatening the success of
U.S. foreign policy in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere. Berger
argues that the Bush approach has isolated the U.S., alienated it
from natural allies, and made its actions appear illegitimate to
much of the world. Cooperation and a “strategic bargain”
with these natural allies are, to Berger, the key to the legitimacy
needed for future success.
Restoring the U.S. “global moral and political authority,”
Berger says, involves “persuasion, not power.” Berger
sums up his article by stating, “…having the right aims
is not enough. The United States needs leaders who ensure that our
means do not undermine our ends…. We need, in short, to reunite
our power with moral authority. Only that combination will weaken
our enemies and inspire our friends.” Berger is referring,
without openly stating the obvious, to the fact that perhaps Bush’s
most serious mistake was his refusal to share the potentially vast
oil-related spoils (“geopolitical stakes”) with allies
like France and Germany. These countries already had oil exploration
and development deals with Saddam Hussein, agreements that were
cancelled by the U.S. invasion. Behind this refusal is something
that Berger politely declines to talk about—the drive for
world domination through control of oil. At least partly, this is
because Berger believes that “regardless of whether the war
was justified, everyone now has a profound stake in Iraq’s
success,” requiring “continuous involvement in Iraq’s
reconstruction and political development.” Berger favors a
“generational commitment” to Iraq, something that he
thinks can only be achieved with and not against Europe. In sum,
Berger’s article helps make clear that the Bushites favor
unilateral world domination by the U.S., whereas the Kerry camp
is satisfied with multilateral world domination in cooperation with
Europe.
Many other CFR members besides Berger have critiqued the Bush administration’s
tactical approach to foreign policy. The 27 signatories of the statement
of Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change, which assails the
Bush administration for its “disastrous” policies, include
21 current CFR members (almost 80 percent of the total). This group
of retired U.S. diplomats and top military officers are angry because
the “structure of respect and influence for the United States”
that they helped build over many decades is crumbling due to Bush’s
failed policies, which amount to a “moral and political disaster.”
Included in this disaster is the undermining of the U.S. military
by the “morally corrosive” environment into which it
was thrust in Iraq. They call for Bush’s defeat in November
and “regime change” in Washington, DC.
Another example of a similar CFR-connected critique of Bush is
the recent book, America Unbound: The Bush Revolution in Foreign
Policy by Ivo H. Daalder and James M. Lindsey. Daalder is a CFR
member and a Senior Fellow in Foreign Policy Studies at the CFR
connected Brookings Institution in Washington, DC. Lindsey is a
CFR member and also a vice president of the Council and its director
of studies. These two prominent foreign policy intellectuals, both
of whom served in the Clinton administration, argue that Bush created
a unilateralist revolution in foreign policy, redefining how the
U.S. engages the world by shredding the constraints that allies
and international institutions have imposed on its freedom of action.
Raw power—domination—has been used to attempt to run
the world. Daalder and Lindsey say that Bush’s policy has
created great resentment abroad and could eventually leave the U.S.
alone in the world, with most countries “against us”
instead of “with us.” They also conclude that Bush’s
policy of preemptive war in Iraq has been shown a complete failure.
The calculus of preemption now looks much less attractive to U.S.
leaders, including military leaders. Iran and North Korea, two other
nations that Bush has prominently targeted for attack, both present
far more daunting military and political challenges than Iraq and
so are unlikely to ever be attacked. Although Bush will not publicly
bury his preemption doctrine, all such policies must be measured
against experience, so Daalder and Lindsey conclude that preemption
is essentially dead.
Senator and CFR member Chuck Hagel wrote the Republicans’
answer to Berger’s articles, which was printed in the July/August
issue of Foreign Affairs. Surprisingly, although it is billed as
“A Republican Foreign Policy,” it is not a defense of
the Bush administration’s foreign policies. In fact, the main
foreign policy contours of Bush’s three and a half years in
office are either not discussed (Iraq and preemptive war) or are
explicitly repudiated (Bush’s appeals to God and his dismissal
of alliances, international institutions, the UN, and “old
Europe”). Hagel writes, “The UN is more relevant today
than it has ever been” and “U.S. interests are not mutually
exclusive from the interests of its friends and allies.” He
further states that the “success of our policies will depend
not only on the extent of our power, but also on an appreciation
of its limits. History has taught us that foreign policy must not
succumb to the distraction of divine mission.” In addition,
“the United States and the European Union can benefit by teaming
up to address the global issues of the coming era” and the
“United States can continue to set an example, not arrogantly,
but cooperatively, through strong leadership and partnership.”
To be sure, the Republican approach, according to Chuck Hagel, still
stresses the need to “assure stable and secure supplies of
oil and natural gas” by the “judicious” use of
military force, in turn requiring a “strong national defense,”
and very high levels of military spending—just like the Democrats.
Democracy, Peace, and Justice
We do not have a real democracy in our country. In the current
system, elections and political power are for sale to those who
have the money and media access to purchase and advertise the candidates
they want to see in power. The occasional weak efforts to control
money in politics have clearly failed and the media has become even
more concentrated and influential. The poster child illustrating
this power is “establishment outsider” Howard Dean,
the once popular Democratic presidential candidate who was crushed
by adverse media coverage, especially by CFR-connected media corporations.
Furthermore, the winner-take-all election system without runoffs
means that “spoiling” and “lesser evil”
voting are built into the structure of the system.
The winner-take-all election system disenfranchises large sections
of the electorate, when, for example, a party, group, or person
supported by 49 percent of the voters in a district gets zero representation.
The Bush administration’s preemptive war doctrine, its disdain
for allies, treaties, and international organizations, its refusal
to consider or respect the interests of others, its attempts to
shred constitutional rights and to justify torture and other illegal
and immoral activity all occurred with considerable help from the
Democratic Party. These policies have increased anti-Americanism
in the Middle East and worldwide. This will translate into significant
support for terrorism against the U.S. and its interests even if
Kerry is elected and his Administration applies a different set
of tactics.
The ongoing question facing the vast majority of people in the
United States is how to build a social movement that can effectively
put democracy and a peaceful foreign policy on the national agenda.
Only then can some of our other key needs be addressed. Something
more basic than a mere switch in the means of empire is needed at
this juncture in human history, something more fundamental than
an imperial agenda dressed in the classic Democratic Party garb
of multilateralism, something better than merely fastening a progressive
tail to Kerry’s Democratic kite.
What is needed is a mass social movement acting directly and independently
in its own name. Only when it is independent can a social movement
undertake the kind of bold and uncompromising militancy required
to put key issues on the agenda and to effect a fundamental reconstruction
of society. People want health care for all, full employment at
a living wage, excellent public education, good retirement benefits,
the right of workers to freely organize unions, affordable decent
housing, ecological sanity, economic democracy, civil liberties,
an end to all racism, sexism, and discrimination, fundamental electoral
reform, and the democratization of the media. A unified social movement
to demand a working people’s agenda needs to be born.
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