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[[Image:Douglas_Feith.jpg|right|thumb|Douglas Feith]]
[[Wikipedia:Disambiguation|Disambiguation]] pages exist to clarify confusion where two or more similarly named articles exist - for example if two famous people have the same name. Ideally, other articles should not link to disambiguation pages; links should go directly to the appropriate "real" article instead.
'''Douglas J. Feith''' has served as the [[Undersecretary of Defense for Policy]] for [[President of the United States|United States President]] [[George W. Bush]] since [[July 2001]]. During a press conference on [[January 26]] [[2005]], [[United States Secretary of Defense]] [[Donald Rumsfeld]], when questioned, confirmed that Feith intends to resign his position and return to the private sector before the summer of [[2005]].
 
This page lists disambiguation pages that have had incoming links, which have been fixed. Perhaps they've been added from [[Wikipedia:Disambiguation pages with links]]. However, they need monitoring.
His responsibilities include the formulation of defense planning guidance and forces policy, [[United States Department of Defense]] relations with foreign countries and the Department's role in [[United States|U.S.]] Government interagency policy making. Feith leads the Northern Gulf Affairs Office, renamed from [[Office of Special Plans]]. In July 2004, this Pentagon unit was heavily criticised by the [[U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence|Senate intelligence committee's]] review of the intelligence leading to war in Iraq. The allegation is that the Office of Special Plans sought to sideline the CIA's assessments of intelligence on Iraq. Senator [[Jay Rockefeller]], the Democrat co-chair of the committee, said that Feith's office may have undertaken "unlawful" intelligence-gathering initiatives, resulting in calls for Feith's resignation.[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2004/07/11/wsept11.xml&sSheet=/news/2004/07/11/ixnewstop.html]
 
==How to help==
Feith is also thought to be responsible for a top secret report, written days after the 9/11 attacks, that called for US retaliation by attacking countries in South America or Southeast Asia (some with an alleged [[Hezbollah]] presence). Information about the document has been released by the [[9/11 Commission Report]]. Paraguay, Argentina and Brazil, as well as other "non-Al Qaeda targets" like Iraq are given as possible targets. The reasoning advanced is that such a move would have come as a "surprise to the terrorist" which would have been caught "off-guard". [http://msnbc.msn.com/id/5570015/site/newsweek]
 
# Pick a disambiguation page to check from the list below.
There were hints that Feith's authority dwindled since the first half of October 2003 when then-[[national security adviser]] [[Condoleezza Rice]] announced that she would head the new [[Iraq Stabilization Group]] (ISG).
# Move it to the bottom of the list.
# Visit the target disambiguation page.
# Click on the [[Wikipedia:What links here|What links here]] link in the "toolbox" on the left-hand side of the page.
# For each of the pages you see there, visit that page and change the link that goes to the disambiguation page to a link to one of the articles listed on the disambiguation page. It is most important to fix articles in the main namespace; articles with "Talk:" and "User:" prefixes, as well as "Wikipedia:" administrative pages, don't necessarily need to be fixed.
#In order to help people find this project, consider using an edit summary like the following: '''<nowiki>disambiguation link repair ([[Wikipedia:Disambiguation pages maintenance|You can help!]]</nowiki>)'''
 
==General lists==
Previous to his appointment, Feith spent fifteen years as the managing attorney of the law firm of Feith & Zell, P.C., located in [[Washington, D.C.]] (September [[1986]]-July [[2001]]).
 
On [[January 26]], [[2005]], DOD announced that Feith was leaving for "personal reasons." His future plans, if any, are unknown.
 
# [[Tudor]] ([[Special:Whatlinkshere/Tudor|links]])
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==Specific lists==
Feith is a [[Neoconservatism (United States)|neoconservative]] and [[Zionism|Zionist]] and advocates a close alliance between the United States and [[Israel]]. Some of his critics describe him as anti-[[Arab]] (see e.g. [http://middleeastinfo.org/article701.html]).
 
For reference in disambiguating abbreviations in "Politics of" articles, see [[Abbreviations used in CIA World Factbook]].
A protege of [[Richard Perle]], the former chairman of Rumsfeld's [[Defense Policy Board]] (DPB) who stands at the center of the neo-conservative foreign-policy network in Washington, Feith has long opposed territorial compromise by Israel.
 
The following disambiguation pages are linked to frequently, and need monitoring.
Feith first entered government as a Middle East specialist on the [[National Security Council]] (NSC) under [[Ronald Reagan]] in 1981, but was abruptly fired after only one year. Perle, who was then serving in the [[Pentagon]] as [[Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security]], however, hired him as his deputy, a post he retained until leaving in 1986 to found Feith & Zell. Three years later, Feith was retained as a lobbyist by the Turkish government and, in that capacity, worked with Perle to build military ties between Turkey and Israel.
#[[Roman]]
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Also note that, although not a disambiguation page, the page for [[American]] relates to the use of the word ''American'' and is not an article about the people of America; most articles linking to this page should probably be re-linked either to [[United States]] or to [[The Americas]].
In [[1996]] he participated in a study group chaired by Perle that produced a report called "A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm" [http://www.israeleconomy.org/strat1.htm] for incoming Prime Minister [[Benjamin Netanyahu]]. In the report Feith, along with Perle, [[James Colbert]], [[Charles Fairbanks, Jr.]], [[Robert Loewenberg]], [[David Wurmser]], and [[Meyrav Wurmser]], called for building a strategic alliance with Turkey, Jordan and a new government in Iraq that would transform the balance of power in the Middle East in such a way that Israel could decisively resist pressure to trade "land for peace" with the Palestinians or Syria.
 
A few [[Wikipedia:Non-unique personal names|Non-unique personal names]]:
Feith was an outspoken foe of the [[Oslo Accords|Oslo process]] and even the [[Camp David]] peace agreement mediated by former President [[Jimmy Carter]] between [[Egypt]] and Israel. In 1997, he published a lengthy article in [[Commentary Magazine]], titled "A Strategy for Israel." In it, Feith argued that Israel should repudiate the Oslo accords and move to retake those parts of the [[West Bank]] and [[Gaza]] that had been transferred to the [[Palestinian National Authority|Palestinian Authority]].
#[[Robert Bradford]]
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#[[Betty Williams]]
#[[Charles Pinckney]]
#[[John Stanley]]
#[[William Phillips]]
#[[John Bennett]]
#[[Richard Russell]]
#[[Stephen Bishop]]
 
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Two years later, he and Perle signed an open letter to President Bill Clinton calling for the United States to work with [[Ahmed Chalabi]]'s [[Iraqi National Congress]] (INC) to oust Saddam Hussein. Chalabi has recently been accused by the interim government of having given information to the Iranians, but these charges have been dropped due to lack of evidence. Supporters of Chalabi see this mostly-successful attempt to discredit him as a power struggle within the Iraqi government. In May of 2000, Perle and Feith signed a report calling for the United States to be prepared to attack Syria militarily unless Damascus failed to withdraw its troops from Lebanon.
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[[Category:Disambiguation]]
Feith also served with Perle on the board of the [[JINSA|Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs]] (JINSA), a think tank that promotes military and strategic ties between the United States and Israel.
 
Like Perle, Feith has long been a hard-liner on foreign policy and arms control. He was an outspoken opponent of the 1972 [[Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty]] and the [[Chemical and Biological Weapons convention]]s which he criticized as ineffective and dangerous to U.S. interests. Among other clients, his firm represented arms giants [[Lockheed Martin]] and [[Northrop Grumman]].
 
Also like Perle, Feith has long taken a strong interest in Israel and its security. His father, [[Dalck Feith]], a philanthropist and major Republican contributor from Philadelphia, was active in the militantly [[Zionism|Zionist]] youth movement [[Betar]], the predecessor of Israel's [[Likud|Likud Party]], in Poland before World War II. Both father and son have been honored by the [[Zionist Organization of America]] (ZOA) which, unlike other mainstream Jewish groups in the United States, has consistently supported Likud positions and the settlement movement in the territories and actively courted the [[Christian right|Christian Right]].
 
Feith's writings on international law and on foreign and defense policy have appeared in ''[[The Wall Street Journal]]'', ''Commentary'', ''[[The New Republic]]'' and elsewhere. He has contributed chapters to a number of books, including James W. Muller, ed., [[Winston Churchill|Churchill]] as Peacemaker; Douglas J. Feith, et al., Israel's Legitimacy in Law and History; and Uri Ra'anan, et al., eds., Hydra of Carnage: International Linkages of [[Terrorism]].
 
Feith holds a J.D. (magna cum laude) from the [[Georgetown University Law Center]] and an A.B. (magna cum laude) from [[Harvard College]].
 
A [[May 16]], [[2004]] news article in ''[[The Boston Globe]]'' identifies Douglas Feith as having argued during the [[Reagan administration]] that [[Geneva Convention]] guarantees should not be extended to terrorists who mingled with civilians. In 2001 this policy was endorsed by Defense Department counsel and implemented, and led to the designation of Al Qaeda and Taliban fighters as "enemy combatants" or "unlawful combatants" rather than as "prisoners of war."
 
Some of Feith's critics label him a [[Chickenhawk (politics)|chickenhawk]], criticizing him for not having served in the military. One such critic is [[United States Army]] [[General]] [[Tommy Franks]], who, according to [[Bob Woodward]]'s 2004 ''[[Plan of Attack]]'', described Feith as the "fucking stupidest guy on the face of the earth" (p.281) [http://slate.msn.com/id/2099277/][http://www.cfr.org/pub7248/max_boot/the_long_march_to_baghdad.php].
 
Feith's former law partner, L. Marc Zell, is a spokesman for the Jewish settlers' movement in the [[West Bank]], and is known to have collaborated with [[Salem Chalabi]] (Ahmed Chalabi's nephew) in Baghdad to help interested companies win contracts for reconstruction projects.
 
In [[August]] [[2004]] it was revealed that one of Feith's top lieutenants, [[Larry Franklin]], an analyst and Iran specialist, has been a subject of a broad FBI investigation and the target of espionage allegations which some characterize as a "witch hunt". He is alleged to have passed secret information to two officials of the [[AIPAC|American Israel Public Affairs Committee]] (AIPAC) and to [[Naor Gilon]], a "senior official" of the Israeli Embassy in Washington.
 
== Further reading ==
* [[Curt Anderson]]. ''White House Learned of Spy Probe in 2001''. ''Associated Press''. September 3, [[2004]].
* Seymour Hersh. ''Chain of Command: The Road from 9/11 to Abu Ghraib''. New York: Harper Collins. 2004. ISBN 0060195916.
* Conference on International Law and the Arab-Israeli Conflict; Siegel, Edward M.; Feith, Douglas J.; & Louis D. Brandeis Society of Zionist Lawyers (1994). ''Israel's Legitimacy in Law and History''. [[Center for Near East Policy]]. ISBN 0964014505.
* Richard Perle et al. (1996). "[http://www.israeleconomy.org/strat1.htm A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm]".
* Bob Woodward. ''Plan of Attack''. New York: Simon & Schuster. 2004. ISBN 074325547X.
== External links ==
* [http://slate.msn.com/id/2100899/ Slate profile of Feith]
* [http://www.newsmeat.com/washington_political_donations/Douglas_Feith.php Douglas Feith's political donations]
 
[[Category:U.S. Dept. of Defense officials|Feith, Douglas]]