> As Green as a Neocon > Why Iraq hawks are driving Priuses. > By Robert Bryce > Posted Tuesday, Jan. 25, 2005, at 6:10 AM PT > > > > President Bush has a simple policy about energy: > produce more of it. The > former oilman has packed his administration with > veterans of the oil and > coal industries. And for most of the first Bush > term, his energy policy > and his foreign policy were joined at the hip. Since > the Bush > administration believed that controlling the flow of > oil from the > Persian Gulf was critically important to the > American economy, the > invasion of Iraq seemed to serve both the > president's energy goals and > his foreign policy ones. > > But a curious transformation is occurring in > Washington, D.C., a split > of foreign policy and energy policy: Many of the > leading > neoconservatives who pushed hard for the Iraq war > are going green. James > Woolsey, the former director of the Central > Intelligence Agency and > staunch backer of the Iraq war, now drives a > 58-miles-per-gallon Toyota > Prius and has two more hybrid vehicles on order. > Frank Gaffney, the > president of the Center for Security Policy and > another neocon who > championed the war, has been speaking regularly in > Washington about fuel > efficiency and plant-based bio-fuels. > > The alliance of hawks and environmentalists is new > but not entirely > surprising. The environmentalists are worried about > global warming and > air pollution. But Woolsey and Gaffney—both > members of the Project for > the New American Century, which began advocating > military action against > Saddam Hussein back in 1998—are going green for > geopolitical reasons, > not environmental ones. They seek to reduce the flow > of American dollars > to oil-rich Islamic theocracies, Saudi Arabia in > particular. > Petrodollars have made Saudi Arabia too rich a > source of terrorist > funding and Islamic radicals. Last month, Gaffney > told a conference in > Washington that America has become dependent on oil > that is imported > from countries that, "by and large, are hostile to > us." This fact, he > said, makes reducing oil imports "a national > security imperative." > > Neocons and greens first hitched up in the fall, > when they jointly > backed a proposal put forward by the Institute for > the Analysis of > Global Security <http://www.iags.org/> , a > Washington-based think tank > that tracks energy and security issues. (Woolsey is > on the IAGS advisory > board.) The IAGS plan <http://www.iags.org/safn.pdf> > proposes that the > federal government invest $12 billion to: encourage > auto makers to build > more efficient cars and consumers to buy them; > develop industrial > facilities to produce plant-based fuels like > ethanol; and promote fuel > cells for commercial use. The IAGS plan is keen on > "plug-in hybrid > vehicles," which use internal combustion engines in > conjunction with > electric motors that are powered by batteries > charged by current from > standard electric outlets. > > The Natural Resources Defense Council > <http://www.nrdc.org/> and the > American Council on Renewable Energy > <http://www.acore.org/gov_advisory.html> (Woolsey > is on the latter's > advisory board, too) both endorsed the IAGS plan. > The environmental > groups, who have been in the weeds ever since George > W. Bush moved in at > 1600 Pennsylvania, are happy for any help they can > get. "It's a > wonderful confluence. We agree on the same goals, > even if it's for > different reasons," says Deron Lovaas, the NRDC's > point-man on auto > issues. > > For Woolsey and Gaffney, the fact that energy > efficiency and > conservation might help the environment is an > unintended side benefit. > They want to weaken the Saudis, the Iranians, and > the Syrians while also > strengthening the Israelis. Whether these ends are > achieved with M-16s > or hybrid automobiles doesn't seem to matter to > them. > > They aren't the only Iraq hawks who have joined the > cause. The Hudson > Institute's Meyrav Wurmser also signed the IAGS > plan. In 1996, she was > one of the authors—along with Richard Perle and > Douglas Feith, of a > famous strategy paper for Israeli Prime Minister > Benjamin Netanyahu that > called for the overthrow of Saddam Hussein and > military assaults against > Lebanon and Syria. (Wurmser's married to fellow > neocon David Wurmser, an > adviser to Dick Cheney, former AEI fellow, and > enthusiast for the Iraq > war.) Clifford May, the president of the Foundation > for the Defense of > Democracies, endorsed the IAGS scheme, too. And the > Committee on the > Present Danger is about to join the > Prius-and-ethanol crowd, as well. A > driving force for America's military buildup since > the '50s now > reconstituted as an antiterror group, the CPD will > issue a paper in the > next few months endorsing many elements of the IAGS > plan. CPD members > include Midge Decter, Jeane Kirkpatrick, Newt > Gingrich, and Steve > Forbes, as well as Woolsey and Gaffney. > > So far, the neocons are the only ones on the right > to break with Bush on > energy policy. They can do this because opposing the > energy policy > doesn't cost them anything—either politically or > economically. The > neocons come mostly out of academia and government > so, unlike other > conservative Republicans, they have few ties to big > business and no > significant connections to the energy lobbyists who > are so influential > with the White House. > > Despite the setbacks in Iraq, the green neocons > believe they can > convince Congress and the White House to adopt their > program. May, the > head of the Foundation for the Defense of > Democracies, predicts that > House Majority Leader Tom DeLay will be "open to > arguments that we can > increase and enhance national security for a > reasonable price." Gaffney > won't name names, but he too is confident, saying, > "We continue to enjoy > access to and friendships with people who are key > policymakers." > > If they can convince Congress and the White House to > enact meaningful > legislation on energy efficiency and > conservation—issues that have been > marginalized since the Carter administration—then > perhaps the neocons > will finally have a success story that they can brag > about. Better > still, it won't require the services of the 82nd > Airborne Division. > > Robert Bryce <mailto:[log in to unmask]> , a > contributing writer at > the Texas Observer, is the author of Cronies: Oil, > the Bushes, and the > Rise of Texas, America's Superstate. > > Article URL: http://slate.msn.com/id/2112608/ > So I see you have finally found a job in DC > converting the neocons to > greenness!!! Good grief what will come next? > Remember the snow job for > the inauguration!! > __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? 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