In
1967, a major publisher, The Dial Press, released Report from
Iron Mountain. The book claimed to be a suppressed, secret
government report, written by a commission of scholars, known as
the “Special Study Group”, set up in 1963, with the document
itself leaked by one of its members. The Group met at an
underground nuclear bunker called Iron Mountain and worked over
a period of two and a half years, delivering the report in
September 1966.
The report was an investigation into the problems that the
United States would need to face if and when “world peace”
should be established on a more or less permanent basis. Or to
quote from the “official” report: “It is surely no exaggeration
to say that a condition of general world peace would lead to
changes in the social structures of the nations of the world of
unparalleled and revolutionary magnitude. The economic impact of
general disarmament, to name only the most obvious consequence
of peace, would revise the production and distribution patterns
of the globe to a degree that would make the changes of the past
fifty years seem insignificant. Political, sociological,
cultural, and ecological changes would be equally far-reaching.
What has motivated our study of these contingencies has been the
growing sense of thoughtful men in and out of government that
the world is totally unprepared to meet the demands of such a
situation.”
The book appeared during the Cold War, but
specifically at a time when America was hit by bloody racial
riots in its cities and piles of body bags being returned from
Vietnam. Was the Government really promoting a culture of war?
The “Report” was the most talked about book of the year. A
number of people believed the Report was authentic. This
impression was helped when noted economist John Kenneth
Galbraith reviewed the book in The Washington Post, using the
pseudonym Herschell McLandress: “As I would put my personal
repute behind the authenticity of this document, so I would
testify to the validity of its conclusions. My reservations
relate only to the wisdom of releasing it to an obviously
unconditioned public.”
Still, many, including most other book reviewers, deemed it to
be a satire. US embassies were asked to comment and had to
disclaim the report, noting it was not an official government
report. Still, President Lyndon B. Johnson apparently couldn’t
be sure that his predecessor (John F. Kennedy) hadn’t
commissioned the report. According to US News and World Report,
the President “hit the roof” upon learning of it and ordered
that the report be “bottled up for all time”.
But
if it was a hoax, who was its perpetrator? Among the accused was
Leonard C. Lewin; he had written the report's introduction, as
well as a previous book on political satire. Another suspect was
John Kenneth Galbraith, because he had written reviews of the
hoax in the Washington Post and Chicago Tribune, even though he
had used an alias. But why had he used an alias, and not his
real name? Though many suspected it was a hoax, no-one had any
evidence to back up their allegations.
By 1972, the book had been translated into 15
languages. It was then that Lewin admitted that it had been a
hoax, in the March 19 New York Times Book Review. The idea for
the Report came from Victor Navasky, who published a satirical
magazine, Monocle. Lewin was also helped by Richard Lingeman and
Marvin Kitman, both working for Monocle. In 1966, Navasky read
an article in the New York Times on a stock market downturn due
to a "peace scare". In 1972, he stated how the Pentagon Papers
and other documents about the Vietnam War "read like parodies of
Iron Mountain rather than the reverse." What was the goal of the
hoax? He stated that “what I intended was simply to pose the
issues of war and peace in a provocative way. To deal with the
essential absurdity of the fact that the war system, however
much deplored, is nevertheless accepted as part of the necessary
order of things. To caricature the bankruptcy of the think-tank
mentality by pursuing its style of scientistic thinking to its
logical ends. And perhaps, with luck, to extend the scope of
public discussion of ‘peace planning’ beyond its usual, stodgy
limits.” In short, it was one thing to have “world peace” as an
ambition, but like the beauty pageant queens that long for it,
the debate needed to transcend it; the “hope” needed to become
an action plan, and it would be there that the various facets of
an accepted component of the economy, politics and society would
be carefully change-managed.
By 1980, the book was out of print. The
controversy seemed forgotten. World peace had not materialized.
But in the 1990s, Lewin discovered that bootleg editions of his
book were being distributed by and to members of rightwing
militia groups who claimed it was an authentic report. His 1972
admission seemed to have bypassed rightwing America. Lewin sued
for copyright infringement, though the groups argued it was a
public domain document – i.e. an official document – and that
Lewin’s name as author was part of the government deception. In
short, they argued that the publication was genuine, but, once
leaked, the government did damage control and claimed it was a
hoax, asking Lewin to admit to it.
The
judge ruled in favor of Lewin, and all remaining copies were
turned over to him. But… In 1993, the book made an appearance in
the controversial movie JFK, in such a way that it was one of
the most powerful scenes of the movie; a scene that “explained”
why there was – could be? – a conspiracy why the
“military-industrial complex” would want to kill Kennedy. How
did this happens? Because Col. Fletcher Prouty believed the
Report was authentic and cited it as such in his book, JFK: The
CIA, Vietnam, and the Plot to Assassinate John F. Kennedy –which
was worked into the film script, Fletcher being portrayed by
Donald Sutherland, meeting Kevin Costner (Jim Garrison) in
Washington – a meeting that never occurred in reality. Stone
used a section from Prouty’s book that comes from the Report and
worked it into the dialogue: “The organizing principle of any
society is for war. The basic authority of a modern state over
its people resides in its war powers. . . . War readiness
accounts for approximately a tenth of the output of the world's
total economy.” For Stone – and many others – it was clear that
the government was a co-existence of various interest groups:
the oil industry; the pharmaceutical industry; but mainly, the
military-industrial complex… warmongers.
In his book, Prouty goes in more detail,
writing that the Group’s existence “was so highly classified
that there is no record, to this day, of who the men in the
group were or with what sectors of the government or private
life they were connected.” Still, he claimed to have managed an
exclusive interview with a “purported member of the Iron
Mountain Special Study Group", who told Prouty he "believes that
the group's mission was delineated by McNamara, William Bundy,
and Dean Rusk." In 1996, Simon & Schuster reprinted the Report,
with a new introduction, underlining that the book was a
political satire.
Though a hoax, it is a political satire, and
thus not without merit. And whereas many Americans are divided
over its status as a genuine report or a hoax, in the end, this
should not really matter. Whether someone wrote it for the US
government, or Lewin wrote it for the American public, there is
a message. Full stop. As Lewin himself pointed out: by 1972,
reality seemed to have become based on the Iron Mountain Report…
because, in essence, the underlying premise is true: war is part
of our economy, and definitely so in the United States, whose
economy is partially kept in balance by military expenditure.
Lewin wrote that at the time, the "world war industry" accounted
“for approximately a tenth of the output of the world's total
economy. […]The United States, as the world's richest nation,
not only accounts for the largest single share of this expense,
currently upward of $60 billion a year, but also ‘... has
devoted a higher proportion of its gross national product to its
military establishment than any other major free world nation.
This was true even before our increased expenditures in
Southeast Asia.’” In fact, America’s military spending is often
bigger than the total public spending of many nations –
specifically so in Africa.
One
of the more controversial statements of the book is no doubt
this statement: “Wars are not ‘caused’ by international
conflicts of interest. Proper logical sequence would make it
more often accurate to say that war-making societies require –
and thus bring about – such conflicts. The capacity of a nation
to make war expresses the greatest social power it can exercise;
war-making, active or contemplated, is a matter of life and
death on the greatest scale subject to social control.” After
the 2003 invasion of Iraq, this statement is largely supported
by the world’s population – but was even in the days of Lewin
“old news”. Intriguingly, the now notorious “weapons of mass
destruction” was a term used in the Report: “The production of
weapons of mass destruction has always been associated with
economic ‘waste.’”
Lewin argued that war was an important tool, as it created
artificial demand, a demand which did not have any political
issues: “war, and only war, solves the problem of inventory.”
The conclusion of the book is that peace, though extremely
unlikely, was actually not in the best interest of society, as
war not only served important economical functions, but also
social and cultural roles. “The permanent possibility of war is
the foundation for stable government, it supplies the basis for
general acceptance of political authority.” As well as: “War is
virtually synonymous with nationhood. The elimination of war
implies the inevitable elimination of national sovereignty and
the traditional nation-state.” And: “War has been the principal
evolutionary device for maintaining a satisfactory balance
between gross human population and supplies available for its
survival. It is unique to the human species.”
Lewin proposed that until substitutes for war
were developed, “war” needed to be maintained, if not improved
in effectiveness. Part of the “genius” of Lewin is in the type
of proposed potential substitutes he proposed – some of which
may have given various governments some inspiration… or is it
just coincidence that “reality” mimics fiction? The Report’s
recommendations were:
- a giant space-research program whose goal was largely
impossible to achieve (a black hole, budget-wise and hence able
to feed the economy);
- create a new, non-human enemy, e.g. the potential threat of an
extra-terrestrial civilization
- create a new threat to Mankind, e.g. pollution
- new ways of limiting births, e.g. via adding drugs to food or
water supply
- create fictitious alternate enemies
- create an omnipresent, virtually omnipotent international
police force.
Some of these options are obviously quite
difficult to achieve – and the world has never seen them come
true. Other contributing factors to our present world, such as
the Internet and technology as a whole, were obviously not
envisioned by the author, living in the 1960s as he was. Still,
many of the ideas of the Report have come true, and we can only
wonder whether they are “created” or genuine problems – and if
they are created, whether the idea originated from the Report,
or whether the myth was already created before.
The Race to the Moon, at the time when the
Report was written in 1967, could well have been seen as a black
hole, definitely if it was followed by a Mars project, and
further missions to outer space. Series like Star Trek and other
series definitely wetted and showed that there was a public
appetite for “going where no-one had gone before”. Still,
despite this interest, in the early 1970s, America had lost
interest in the various Moon landings – and the government
seemed to take this as its cue to descope the space program. If
anyone was pushing that agenda, he wasn’t too good on keeping
the public hooked on the “space drug”.
As
to the creation of a non-human, extra-terrestrial enemy: that
idea was well-known in science fiction and in the 1930s, Welles
had created mass hysteria – at least in some corners – with the
radio hoax of an alien invasion. Furthermore, the ET menace was
part of the UFO myth, a phenomenon largely kept alive and
controlled by the US government – which actively promoted the
belief in an alien presence on Earth. That story ran out of
power in the late 1990s, shortly after the 50th anniversary of
the mythical Roswell crash. Of course, unknown “things” remain
to be seen in the sky and the potential to use the phenomenon
remains and can be picked up at any time, almost taking up where
it was left a decade ago. For a brief moment, in the mid 1990s,
it seemed that the new enemy was going to be “non-intelligent”:
the possibility that comets and meteors were out there, and were
set to strike us. Astronomers asked not money to search for ET,
but to search for objects that could kill us, like they had
killed the dinosaurs more than 60 million years ago. But that
idea once again has not resulted in any clear financial
commitment… and if anyone wanted to unite the world because we
were facing a global annihilation, it only worked in Armageddon
and Deep Impact.
Another new threat has been created, and again we find it listed
as a potential remedy to cure the world of the war infection:
humanity itself. Not only is there AIDS, bird flu and other
killer diseases that make their way in and out of the news,
there is also our onslaughts on natural resources, abuse of oil,
the threat of sea level and weather changes, etc. Largely,
pollution and the environment have been used by governments as
an excuse to raise extra taxes, to fill unforeseen gaps in the
government’s budgets. Intriguingly, those governments that need
extra money most, are the first to embrace the “Green Agenda”.
So even though the Report was right in the sense that pollution
and the environment could drive the economy, so far, governments
have only used it as a supportive economic and social measure –
and it seems clear that at the moment, it may miss its global
potential, if only because many governments are already
redefining the need and use of nuclear energy as an economic
requirement – whether it is desirable or not. And that is where
“war” remains too: though seen as undesirable by most, it is a
part of the economy, it is a part of our life. Some wars are
deemed to be “required”, others carefully created, some desired
and the excuse defined only later – Iraq 2003 being a primary
example of that. But war is also the solution to economic
problems: Iraq 2003 being again a prime example: to keep the
economy going, the West needs oil – and America needs oil more
than most. This is a problem. It is a “fact” that wars need to
be fought to keep the war economy going. Iraq 2003 combined the
two, in the hope to come up with a winning formula. In truth, it
was a “win-win” situation, for war itself was positive for the
economy, and if the war resulted in more oil, two goals were
achieved.
Still, “war” as a currency was vastly different in 1966 than
e.g. 1996. In 1966, the Cold War provided an excuse in the need
to build up and maintain – i.e. spend money – on the instruments
of war, even though war itself did not need to be fought as
such. With the collapse of the East Bloc in the late 1980s, this
status quo had to be abandoned. In short, the American military
once again needed to fight wars, or a new enemy, which required
a military deterrent, had to be found – or created.
The
Clinton Administration partially resolved this problem, by
setting up the US Army as a “global police force” (another
recommendation of the Report) that was for hire – which the
European Union took up to resolve problems in Eastern Europe in
the late 1990s. However, when Bush came into office, he stated
that America would look “inwards” and focus on its internal
economy. He did not want to see his army used as a “Global
Police Force”. Though extremely ambitious and noble, Bush ran
into the very problem that the Report had underlined: war was an
economic component. Bush, it seemed, simply did not address it –
he seemed to ignore the problem. In his approach, the US
military were surplus to requirements… there, but not used. It
is clear that troops could not be set loose on the streets of
America – though the New Orleans disaster of 2005 came close. As
such, September 11 offered a great solution. The Bush
Administration realized that the promise they had made in 2000,
to bring economic prosperity to America by focusing on its
economy and not on war, was far more difficult than they
thought. It suggests that before 2000, the Bush Administration
had not read the Report… for it had no plan for economic change
that excluded war. As a consequence, the Bush Administration
embraced Project New American Century, which in short is a
variation on the Clinton policy. It argued that America would
bring world peace about… by military force… and by creating
regime change in countries that held back world peace. But
rather than have the US military as a contract resource for
hire, the Project wanted America to lead and control this
process. In this approach, the US continued to use the military
as an “in-house resource” and thus easily plotted into economic
models, rather than put it out “for hire”, not knowing whether
countries will use it – or will even pay for them (which was
part of the European use of the troops for the Balkan). It seems
that contributors to Project New American Century have read the
Report… and have come up with a new potential solution…
___________________________________________
Iron Mountain, 1967
(Amazon)
Following
is the U.S. News & World Report on The Report from
Iron Mountain from November 20, 1967. The Iron Mountain
Report continues to have some currency among conspiracy
researchers. Hoaxed or not, the unintentially humorous situation
its publication set off should not be lost on readers. Pentagon
bureaucrats found it so plausible that, according to the caption
underneath a DC skyline photo that accompanied this article, "In
Washington, a "manhunt" began for the unidentified author."
"Hoaxed" political analysis reached a new peak recently with the
publication of The Real Report on the Last Chance to Save
Capitalism in Italy. Those with an interest in Iron
Mountain would do well to check out the Real Report,
reviewed near the bottom of the main Steamshovel page
with a link to its publisher, Flatland Books.
Hoax or Horror? A Book That Shook White House
There can be no peace, but endless war may be
good for the U. S. anyway-that is the conclusion reported in a
volume causing a severe case of jitters in official Washington.
Reason: The book purports to be based on a secret,
Government-financed study by top experts. Some say it is grimly
serious. Others call it leg-pulling satire. Whatever the truth,
it is something of a sensation in high places. [inset]-------
"Report From Iron Mountain" was published October 16 by the Dial
Press of New York City. It has an introduction by Leonard C.
Lew- in, a New York free-lance writer. Mr. Lewin wrote that the
manuscript was made available to him in 1966 by a member of the
15- man "Special Study Group" which produced the work. That
person is referred to as "John Doe" and is described as a
professor of social science from "a large Middle Western
University." The manuscript identifies "Iron Mountain" as the
assembly point for the study group, near Hudson, N. Y. The
Library of Congress, on November 10, told "U.S. News & World
Report" that "Iron Mountain" has not been registered. To do so
would require divulging at least the nationality of the author.
--------[end inset] Did a select group of prominent Americans
meet in secret sessions between 1963 and 1966 and produce a re-
port that advised the U. S. Government it could never afford an
era of peace? Yes-according to the mysterious new book, "Report
From Iron Mountain on the Possibility and Desirability of
Peace." No-came a resounding chorus from worried Government
officials, who, nonetheless, were double-checking with one
another-just to make sure. The response of experts and political
observers ranged from "nutty" to "clever satire" to "sinister."
IS WAR NECESSARY? Central theme of the book,
which purports to reflect the unanimous view of 15 of the
nation's top scholars and economists, is this: War and
preparations for it are indispensable to world stability.
Lasting peace is probably unattainable. And peace, even if it
could be achieved, might not be in the best interests of
society. All this set off a blazing debate in early November,
cries of "hoax"-and a "manhunt" for the author, or authors.
Sources close to the White House revealed that the
Administration is alarmed. These sources say cables have gone to
U. S. embassies, with stern instructions: Play down public
discussion of "Iron Mountain"; emphasize that the book has no
relation whatsoever to Government policy. LBJ's
REACTION. But nagging doubts lingered. One informed
source confirmed that the "Special Study Group," as the book
called it, was set up by a top official in the Kennedy
Administration. The source added that the report was drafted and
eventually submitted to President Johnson, who was said to have
"hit the
roof"-and then ordered that the report be bottled up for all
time. As the turmoil mounted, so did the speculation about those
who participated in writing "Iron Mountain." John Kenneth
Galbraith, former Ambassador to India, was quoted by "The
Harvard Crimson" as having parried the question of authorship.
Mr. Galbraith, who reviewed "Iron Mountain" under a pseudonym,
was re- ported to have said: "I seem to be, on all matters, a
natural object of suspicion." And he added: "Dean Rusk, Walt
Bestow, even Robert Bowie could as easily have written the book
as 1. Yes, Rusk could." Several sources turned toward Harvard in
general as the site of authorship. One even went so far as to
suggest that the book is an effort by Kennedy forces to
discredit Lyndon Johnson. A BIG SPOOF? Whatever
else it was, "Iron Mountain" raised fears at high levels that it
would be a mother lode for Communist propagandists. There was
also a feeling that if the book is just an elaborate spoof, it
is not likely to find under- standing or sympathy in world
capitals. In the academic community, many held the view that
"Iron Mountain" was a hilarious hoax-a kind of dead-pan parody
of the studies emanating from the nation's "think tanks." One
history professor at a large Mid- western university, telephoned
by "U.S. News & World Report," came on the line with these
words: "I didn't do it." But he added: "Whoever did is laughing
his sides off. He's saying, in effect, 'Look, if you read and
take seriously some of the bilge in these exalted studies, you
might as well read and take seriously my little exercise.' " In
all the furor, a literary analogy cropped up. Not since George
Orwell's "1984" appeared some 18 years ago has there been such a
controversial satire. "WAR IS PEACE." Mr.
Orwell's characters spoke a language called "new- speak." They
lived by the all-powerful state's slogan: "War is Peace." In
"Report From Iron Mountain," the language is the flat, metallic
jargon dear to the U. S. bureaucrat. The message: War is, "in
itself, the principal basis of organization on which all modern
societies are constructed."
Report From Iron Mountain (Amazon)