Retired U.S. Army General and former Supreme Allied Commander Europe, , identified the "seven countries in five years" plan in 2007.
According to Clark, he was shown a classified memo in November 2001 by a senior military staff officer in the Pentagon, which outlined a strategy to "take out" seven nations in five years, starting with , followed by , , , , , and finally, .
Purpose and Context
- Purpose: The stated goal was to destabilize or "take out" these countries to reshape the map of the Middle East and North Africa following the 9/11 attacks.
- The Intent: stated that officials in the Office of the Secretary of Defense (then Donald Rumsfeld's office) aimed to use the post-9/11 atmosphere to aggressively intervene in countries they considered "old Soviet surrogate" governments or hostile to US-Israeli interests.
- Initial Action: The campaign was designed to start with (2003) and proceed from there.
revealed this information, which he detailed in his book Winning Modern Wars (2003) and in a 2007 interview on Democracy Now!, to illustrate the "policy coup" he believed was occurring, where the US was pushing for war without sufficient public debate or evidence of involvement in the 9/11 attacks.
The list actually contained seven countries, as identified by General Wesley Clark during his 2007 interview with Democracy Now!. According to Clark, the classified memo from the Office of the Secretary of Defense outlined a plan to "take out" the following nations within a five-year period:
- (the starting point)
- (intended as the final target)
Clark stated that he first learned of the general intention to attack Iraq just weeks after 9/11, and was shown the expanded list of seven countries shortly thereafter during a subsequent visit to the Pentagon.