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    Scott Ritter: The Best Speech I Never Gave - He pulls out of the Feb. 19 anti-war rally Archived Message

    Posted by sashimi on February 10, 2023, 9:56 am

    (quote)
    [Note: I was going to speak at the Rage against the War Machine rally, scheduled
    for February 19 at the Lincoln Memorial, in Washington, D.C. For personal
    reasons, I will no longer be speaking.

    In short, I have decided to take one for the team.

    I wish all participants and attendees at this rally to have a very successful
    event, and hope that it can serve as the start of something even bigger down the
    road.

    This is the speech I was planning to deliver at the rally. I think it would have
    done the event proud.]


    Thank you very much for allowing me the opportunity to address you today.

    I speak to you from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, a place of history filled
    with gravitas worthy of the task we have set for ourselves at this time in our
    collective history: to stand up - no, to rage - against a war machine that has
    perverted the very definition of what it means to be an American.

    We stand here today at the very nexus of this war machine. To our right, just
    over the Potomac River, lies the Pentagon, a structure built at a time when
    America called upon its collective might to defeat the scourge of Nazi Germany
    and Imperial Japan, but which has since then morphed into the very symbol of
    evil itself, a breeding ground for weapons and plans that are used by the other
    partners, in what has become known as the military-industrial complex, to spread
    malfeasance around a world we once protected, but now enslave through a process
    of perpetual conflict used to sustain the American war machine.

    And who are these other partners? Before us, past the monument to our founding
    father, George Washington, stands the Capitol of the United States, where the
    people's representatives fund, in great secrecy, the nefarious schemes cooked up
    in the bowels of the Pentagon.

    And to our left stands the White House, the seat of Executive authority, where
    individuals we invest with singular authority betray the trust of those who put
    them there by conceiving and implementing policies designed to further the
    Pentagon's war efforts.

    This is the very nexus of evil, an unholy trinity of terroristic madness, which
    some 61 years ago Dwight D. Eisenhower, an American warrior turned political
    leader, warned the American people about, cautioning that "in the councils of
    government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence,
    whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential
    for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist."

    In the history of the United States that has transpired since that speech, no
    truer words have been spoken by an American president, and no greater wisdom has
    been disregarded by those whom Eisenhower entrusted with that message - we, the
    people of the United States.

    We stand here today to announce to this terrible trinity, this
    military-industrial complex, this war machine, that we hear you now, President
    Eisenhower - we hear you, and we will act on your warning to bring this nexus of
    un-American conspiracy to an end.

    Of all the weapons produced by the military-industrial complex, of all the evil
    schemes hatched in the minds of the so-called national security experts - most
    of whom are unelected by, and unknown to, we, the American people - none reek of
    madness more than nuclear weapons.

    "Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds," the father of the American
    atomic bomb, Robert Oppenheimer, said at the time of the first American nuclear
    test.

    Destroyer of worlds.

    This is the ever-present reality that we all live in today - that from this
    nexus of evil we call the military-industrial complex comes the very weapons
    necessary to bring the words of the Hindu sacred text that Oppenheimer quoted -
    the Bhagavad-Gita - to life and, in doing so, bring about our collective deaths.

    Most Americans, including many of you assembled here today, live in blissful
    ignorance of just how close the world has come to being destroyed by
    Oppenheimer's progeny.

    On 26 September 1983, a Soviet Officer, Lieutenant Colonel Petrov, was on duty
    at a nuclear early-warning station when the system reported that five nuclear
    armed missiles had been launched from the United States. Colonel Petrov
    disregarded protocol requiring him to report this detection as a factual launch,
    an act that would have triggered a Soviet response, and in doing so bought
    precious time for the error to be identified, and nuclear war averted.

    In November 1983 the United States and NATO carried out a command post exercise
    code-named "Able Archer 83" which tested the launch control procedures for the
    release of NATO nuclear weapons against Soviet and Warsaw Pact targets. The
    Soviets, believing this exercise to be a cover for a first strike, placed its
    nuclear forces on high alert. Later, the CIA assessed that the Able Archer 83
    exercise brought the US and Soviets closer to nuclear conflict than any time
    since the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962.

    And on January 25, 1995, the Soviets detected the launch of a Norwegian
    atmospheric test rocket that mimicked the track of a US Nay Trident
    submarine-launched nuclear weapon. Fearing a high-altitude nuclear attack that
    could blind Russian radar, Russian nuclear forces went on high alert, and the
    "nuclear briefcase" was delivered to Russian President Boris Yeltsin, who had to
    make a split-second decision whether to launch a retaliatory nuclear strike
    against the United States

    These three incidents underscore the razor's edge we all walk daily when it
    comes to living in a world where nuclear weapons exist. One mistake, one error
    or judgement, and the Bhagavad-Gita becomes reality.

    We were saved from the inevitability of our collective demise by one thing, and
    one thing only - arms control. The deployment into Europe by both the US and
    Soviet Union of intermediate-range nuclear armed missiles in the 1980's only
    increased the possibility of a mistake or misunderstanding that could trigger a
    nuclear conflict. The fact that these weapons could reach their respective
    target in five minutes or less once launched meant that the 30-40-minute buffer
    of time that existed regarding the use of strategic nuclear forces was no longer
    there.

    To put it more starkly, if it were not for the implementation of the
    intermediate nuclear forces treaty in 1988 that eliminated these new and
    dangerous weapons, the January 25, 1995 atmospheric rocket incident would have
    more than likely resulted in a general nuclear war, simply for the fact that
    Boris Yeltsin would have been denied the luxury of time to decide not to launch
    his missiles.

    Everyone standing here today should reflect on this statement and say a quiet
    word of thanks to those men and women, American and Soviet alike, who made the
    intermediate nuclear forces treaty a reality and, in doing so, literally saved
    the world from nuclear destruction.
    (/quote)
    -- Cont'd at https://www.scottritterextra.com/p/the-best-speech-i-never-gave

    Message Thread:

    • Scott Ritter: The Best Speech I Never Gave - He pulls out of the Feb. 19 anti-war rally - sashimi February 10, 2023, 9:56 am