Only a few, as yet, grasp the dynamics already in 
            motion that will almost certainly produce a long and protracted war, 
            as well as huge economic and perhaps physical dislocations in the 
            United States and around the world. Additional attacks on Americans 
            are almost a certainty, even -- as I am about to describe -- a 
            necessity. The rhetoric from President Bush and his Administration 
            contains messages for the American people, which they do not yet 
            grasp, and for terrorist organizations, which they most certainly 
            do. "This is a war and it will not be a short war." "This will not 
            be over quickly." "We have a war plan that will work, over whatever 
            period of time it requires." "There will be many casualties. The 
            military is prepared for that." "This is not just an effort to get 
            bin Laden. This is a war to wipe out terrorism all over the world." 
            "We are not thinking just in terms of a few air strikes. Ground 
            troops will be involved. And some of them will die." "We will go 
            after terrorism wherever terrorism threatens the United States." 
            "Americans need to be prepared for more sacrifices and more 
            casualties." "Just removing bin Laden won't suffice. We are going 
            after terrorism in all of the countries where it resides."
            The last statement is the first great lie of this 
            war. As the U.S. government has announced its partnership with the 
            drug-financed government of Pakistan, which has supported terrorist 
            groups from the Middle East to the Balkans, to China, to Southeast 
            Asia, the deception begins. Indeed, after Afghanistan, Pakistan 
            should have been the first great enemy in this war. It's long 
            support of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan ended only as the 
            Taliban destroyed most of that nation's opium crop in February of 
            this year. As in every conflict since World War II, the drug trade 
            will now see a new day of freedom.
            And I guarantee that terrorist groups are well 
            aware of one fact that we, as Americans, have not yet grasped. 
            George W. Bush carries on his shoulder the political memory of a 
            father who waged a war against Sadam Hussein and then left him in 
            power. He can afford no such image in the current context and the 
            military he commands must become engaged in a do or die battle. They 
            too, will accept no less.
            That said, the terrorist groups in or from 
            Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Syria, the Sudan, Yemen, Jordan, 
            Algeria, Somalia, Turkey, Chechnya, Uzbekistan, Indonesia, Malaysia, 
            the Philippines, Germany, Ireland, France, Spain, Italy, Albania, 
            Peru, Colombia, Ecuador and Mexico know that they are now in a "use 
            it or lose it" position. For, not knowing where and when the 
            industrialized nations may strike, they now realize that almost any 
            action against any political group will go unchallenged in the world 
            press. Even separatist groups not posing an immediate threat can be 
            conveniently eliminated in the months and perhaps years to come. As 
            evidenced by the almost immediate admission of China into the World 
            Trade Organization, after 15 years of unsuccessful attempts, the 
            warp drive for globalization - unfettered by any need to respond to 
            public opinion - has now been engaged. The most cynical part of me 
            hopes that the headline for this war will not be, "The G-8 Wipes Out 
            Poverty." In this model I must say that the long discussed, but 
            rarely acknowledged, alleged plans for massive global population 
            reduction are no longer a "back burner" issue. 
            Therefore, in this context, the American people 
            must expect additional attacks that may even include biological 
            warfare or nuclear devices on American soil. And these attacks, 
            already being hinted at by the Administration, will serve an 
            additional purpose. Two days after the attacks every street and 
            highway was a sea of American flags. Now, a week after the attacks - 
            at least in Los Angeles - they are hard to find. Whether we admit it 
            or not, what the vast majority of the American people really want is 
            for this to go away. Only sustained attacks on the American people 
            will provide George W. Bush with the political mandate to wage the 
            war he has committed to fight - to the bitter end. As the economic 
            impact sinks in, and as Americans feel the pain in their wallets, 
            the willingness of American citizens to experience the carnage that 
            has been raging around the world for decades - in the name of 
            prosperity and for the benefit of the G-8's largest corporations - 
            is, in my opinion, a big question mark. Do not expect a quick 
            recovery in the stock market based upon emotion. As we describe in 
            this issue, the fundamental weaknesses in the U.S. economy were not 
            blown up with these attacks. And the markets, if they can still be 
            called that, are driven by one 800 pound guerilla above all others - 
            earnings. With the exception of defense contractors, there is 
            absolutely nothing hopeful to report and I, for one, cannot and 
            refuse to be an advocate for investing in the destruction of the 
            planet.
            The United States has many enemies. It is the 
            economic enemies that warrant the most scrutiny now because the 
            perception that America is the safest place in the world in which to 
            invest foreign capital has been dealt a huge blow. Further blows 
            will come with further attacks and this exposes the fine line that 
            the Administration must walk. Without more attacks at home, the bold 
            gambit of George Bush, et al will fail for lack of political 
            support. With them, the world may eventually conclude that the 
            United States is economically expendable as nations look to their 
            own interests. Too much economic blood in the water will start a 
            feeding frenzy.
            In the major media, in the alternative media, in 
            Congress and around the world the context now provides the 
            opportunity for great lights with courageous souls to emerge and to 
            lead. We are walking a fine line on a precipice that may lead to 
            Armageddon or, please God, something better. The Bush Administration 
            is not equipped with a repertoire of responses sufficient to 
            navigate the long term perils. We must dig and find something better 
            within ourselves.
            We are living in a whole New World. We just don't 
            know what it looks like yet.
              Mike Ruppert
            Sept. 18, 2001