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Bush and Blair's war without end

So you think the war on Iraq is all about weapons of mass destruction?
WRONG!

Maybe about Saddam Hussein's dictatorship - about "regime change"? WRONG!

About Iraqi links with al Qaida or other terrorists? WRONG!

That Iraq has not complied with the UN Security Council resolutions? 
WRONG AGAIN.

That the US and Britain (and their Australian deputy sheriff) are about
bringing "freedom and democracy"? WRONG.

About seizing control of Iraq's oil? That is a main part of the plan but
even that is not all.

by Anna Pha and Peter Symon

"Regardless of whether we say so publicly", said defence intelligence 
expert Anthony H Cordesman of the influential Washington Center For 
Strategic and International Studies, "we will go to war because Saddam 
sits at the centre of a region with more than 60% of all the world's oil 
reserves."

In a draft plan prepared by the Pentagon and quoted in the New York 
Times (9-3-92) it was stated quite bluntly: "In the Middle East and 
South West Asia our overall objective is to remain the predominant 
outside power in the region and preserve US and western access to the 
regions oil."

Ten years on that objective has not changed.

Vice President Dick Cheney received an energy policy report five months
before September 11, 2001, advocating the use of military force against 
any enemy such as Iraq to secure US access to and control of Middle 
Eastern oil fields.

"Iraq remains a destabilising influence to . the flow of oil to
international markets from the Middle East. Saddam Hussein has also
demonstrated a willingness to threaten to use the oil weapon and to use 
his own export program to manipulate oil markets", said the report to 
the Pentagon.

The report titled Strategic Energy Policy Challenges for the 21st 
Century describes the energy sector as being in a critical condition. It 
says, "A crisis could erupt at any time [which] could have a potentially 
enormous impact on the US . and would affect US national security and 
foreign policy in dramatic ways."

The report raises concerns about the US becoming too reliant on foreign
powers supplying it with oil and gas and the growing anti-American 
feeling in the oil rich states.

"Gulf allies are finding their domestic and foreign policy interests
increasingly at odds with US strategic considerations, especially as
Arab-Israeli tensions flare", said the report.

"They have become less inclined to lower oil prices . A trend towards
anti-Americanism could affect regional leaders' ability to co-operate 
with the US in the energy area."

This fear of oil states in the Middle East being beyond the control of 
the US and its energy corporations is behind the wider objective of the 
US which is expressed when George Bush says in his State of the Union 
speech, "Americans should not expect one battle, but a lengthy campaign, 
unlike any other we have ever seen".

George Bush makes it very clear when he says, "Every nation in every 
region now has a decision to make. Either you are with us or you are 
with the terrorists. From this day forward, any nation that continues to 
harbour or support terrorism will be regarded by the United States as a 
hostile regime."

Hence the agenda, of which war on Iraq is only the beginning, is not 
only the establishment of a US base in Iraq and a compliant Government, 
but it involves a far broader objective -- that of controlling all 
Middle Eastern oil. Any threat to this objective will be dealt with.

Redrawing the map

For many decades British and French imperialist interests dominated the
Middle East. With the break-up of the Ottoman Empire and following WW I, 
the spoils were divided up and new states carved out by these two 
powers. French power predominated in Syria and Lebanon. British power 
held absolute sway in Jordan, Iraq and Saudi Arabia.

The US objective is not simply to seize control of Iraqi oil but all the 
oil resources of the Middle East and if this involves the redrawing of 
the political map in the face of rising anti-American sentiments, this 
will also be done.

Today the four biggest and most powerful petroleum corporations in the 
world are based in Britain and the US: Exxon-Mobil, Shevron-Texaco, 
British Petroleum-Amoco and Royal Dutch-Shell.

This explains why the Blair Government has so enthusiastically lined up 
with the US objectives of war and redivision. It also explains the 
resistance of France and Germany. They are being excluded and as a 
by-product, the Euro as a currency will be weakened against the dollar.

Sasha Lilley who is an independent producer and correspondent for Free
Speech Radio News, reports on an interview with British Labour Party 
Member of Parliament George Galloway. He confirmed that the aims of the 
US and Britain go well beyond replacing the Iraqi leader.

Lilley quotes Mr Galloway as saying: "They include a recasting of the 
entire Middle East, the better to ensure the hegemony of the big powers 
over the natural resources of the Middle East and the safety and 
security of the vanguard of imperialist interests in the area - the 
State of Israel. And part of that is actually redrawing boundaries."

Mr Galloway is vice-chairman of the Parliamentary Labour Party Foreign
Affairs Committee and, says Lilley, has close relations to Britain's
Ministry of Defence. "Galloway says that British Ministers and former
Ministers are primarily focused on the break-up of Saudi Arabia and Iraq 
in the wake of an attack against Saddam Hussein, but are also discussing 
the possible partition of Egypt, Sudan, Syria and Lebanon", reports Lilley.

"These officials have become taken with the realisation that the borders 
of the Middle East are recent creations dating back only to WWI when 
Britain and France divided the region between themselves."

Lilley continues, "This divvying up of the region by imperial powers led 
to the creation of the states of Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and Iraq among 
others. Under the aegis of Britain, the modern state of Saudi Arabia 
emerged in the late 1920s, absorbing the hitherto separate eastern, 
central and western regions - including the holy sites of Mecca and 
Medina - of what constitutes the country today.

"The partition of the Middle East was partially driven by the oil
conglomerates of the time."

Lilley makes the point that, "While massive upheaval in the Middle East
would hurt oil revenues initially, a new constellation of power there 
could in the long run safeguard the interests of the petroleum 
conglomerates from the present instability of the region."

Saudi Arabia, with a quarter of the world's petroleum reserves is one of 
the main areas of concerns to the US. There are fears that the present 
regime will be overthrown and replaced by more progressive and anti-US 
Government.

According to George Galloway one of the scenarios being discussed in 
British government circles is to divide Saudi Arabia into two or 
possibly three countries.

This "would have the helpful bonus of avoiding foreign forces having to
occupy the holiest places in Islam, when they're only interested really 
in oil wells in the eastern part of the country".

According to Galloway, the US troops based throughout Saudi Arabia could 
be withdrawn from the areas containing Mecca and Medina, the most 
hallowed sites of the Islamic world, where the US military presence is a 
source of great anti-American sentiment amongst many Saudis."

Soldiers would then occupy the eastern province of the country which
contains the major oil fields, including the largest oil field in the 
world, Ghawar, and the industrial centres of the kingdom.

Lilley raises the question of the destabilisation of the region with war 
on Iraq in which "radical anti-American protesters move to overthrow 
their governments and the US intervenes to prevent the emergence of such 
hostile regimes. The US long ago granted itself permission to intervene 
in Saudi Arabia if the House of Saud were threatened by internal revolt, 
and this could be extended elsewhere under the licence of the 'war on 
terrorism'."

What is being talked about here is a reorganisation, or redistribution 
of boundaries in the Middle East and a re-colonisation by the US and 
Britain. Such thinking is not only prevalent in British Government 
circles but also in the US.

Securing the realm

The Under-Secretary of Policy at the US Department of Defense , Douglas
Feith, who is now in the number three position at the Pentagon, prior to 
his Pentagon appointment wrote with others a document headed A Clean 
Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm.

He advised the Israeli Government to "work closely with Turkey and 
Jordan to contain, destablise, and roll back some of its most dangerous 
threats", including attacking Lebanon and Syria.

"Israel can shape its strategic environment, in cooperation with Turkey 
and Jordan, by weakening, containing and even rolling back Syria", wrote 
Feith and others.

Apart from using the war on Iraq as an opportunity to attack Syria, 
"Israel could once and for all settle the 'Palestinian question' by 
expelling the Palestinian population to Jordan as many in Israel have 
been advocating", says Lilley.

Henry Kissinger summed up the sentiment held by the US administration's
thinking in the opening to his Does America Need a Foreign Policy, with 
the words, "the US is enjoying a pre-eminence unrivalled by even the 
greatest empires in the past".

Thinking in British circles is very similar. In an article entitled "A
Civilisational Challenge", Kanan Makiya says, "the problem is much 
deeper than bin Laden and his associates, and will not end with their 
demise. Nor is it about Islam and its relation with the West; it is 
above all about the mess that the Arab part of the Muslim world is in, 
and that part is some seventeen per cent of the whole."

Kanan Makiya teaches at Brandeis University, a Jewish college near Boston.

He refers to the ultimate target being the whole post Ottoman Arab 
order. "This is a revolt of the sons against the fathers who had to make 
all the compromises and broker all the dirty little deals that created 
the constellation of ultimately failed states that we see today in the 
Middle East."

These "dirty little deals" were the cut up and reworking of boundaries 
made by the French and the British imperialists, but there is no mention 
of the French and British creating "failed states", it's all the fault 
of the Arabs.

This article appeared in a publication called Re-Ordering the World, the
long term implications of the 11 September. It was published by the 
Foreign Policy Centre in Britain, whose patron is British Prime Minister 
Tony Blair and whose President is former Foreign Secretary Robin Cook.

In that publication Robert Cooper, an adviser to Tony Blair, says, "The
challenge to the postmodern world [the successful states] is to get used 
to the idea of double-standards. Among ourselves, we operate on the 
basis of laws and open cooperative security. But when dealing with more 
old fashioned kind of states outside the post-modern continent of 
Europe, we need to revert to the rougher methods of an earlier era - 
force, pre-emptive attack, deception, whatever is necessary to deal with 
those who still live in the 19th century world of 'every state for itself'."

Robert Cooper goes on to propose a return to colonialism and 
imperialism. "Empire and imperialism are words that have become terms of 
abuse in the postmodern world. Today there are no colonial powers 
willing to take on the job, though the opportunities, perhaps even the 
need, for colonisation is as great as it ever was in the 19th century."

Cooper talks about "a new kind of imperialism".

He said that if states wished to benefit "they must open themselves up 
to the interference of international organisations and foreign states.". 
He goes onto cite the example of Kosovo where intervention has resulted 
in not only the on-going presence of foreign forces but the imposition 
of police, judges, prison officers, central bankers, 100 NGOs and many 
others who also remain on an on-going basis.

The UN is involved in the establishment, training and financing of this
infrastructure.

Cooper dresses up his vision of re-colonisation with warm-sounding terms
such as "cooperative empire", "dedicated to liberty and democracy".

The post-modern states, and he means Britain and the US in the first 
place, will colonise the "failed states" in a new world "which is open 
for investment and growth". This is Cooper and Blair's "new kind of 
imperialism".

The Middle East is just the beginning.

References:

1. Re-Ordering the World: the long-term implications of 11 September, 
The Foreign Policy Centre, 2002, London

2.Third World Resurgence Magazine, November/December 2002, Issue 
No147/148, from the following articles:

Invitation to a war (Jeremy Seabrook)

The Iraq Syndrome: Demonic victims and angelic demons (Claude Alvares)

The US's battle for oil (Neil Mackay)

The new world imperial order (Jim Lobe)

A new age of empire (Sasha Lilley)

The rediscovery of imperialism (John Bellamy Foster)

These and a number of other extremely important articles may be read on 
the Third World Network's website by clicking onto The US War Against 
Iraq: Some Perspectives:

http://www.twnside.org.sg J


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