George W. Bush’s team entered office in January 2001 with the firm
intention of overthrowing the regime in Baghdad. Bush had expressed this
intention himself during his presidential campaign.
...
At the risk of annoying those who react to any explanation of U.S.
foreign policy in terms of economic interests, and oil interests in particular,
with cries of “reductionism”: the oil lobby has traditionally played a key role
in formulating U.S. foreign policy, at the very least since the Second World
War.[5]
...
Some administrations are more sensitive than others to oil company
influence, however. The administration of the younger Bush, whose presidential
campaign had all the oil and gas industry’s chief companies (including of course
ExxonMobil, BP Amoco, El Paso, and Chevron) among its main donors, is certainly
one of the most sensitive. Besides his own personal and family ties to the
industry, Bush appointed people with equally close or closer ties to it to key
posts in his administration, including Vice President Dick Cheney (Halliburton)
and National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice (Chevron).
...
Indeed, if estimates of future demand are reasonably correct, the
Persian Gulf must expand oil production by almost 80 percent during 2000–2020,
achievable perhaps if foreign investment is allowed to participate and if Iran
and Iraq are free of sanctions.[10]
...
For the Bush administration, as in fact for U.S. capitalism as a
whole, the need to put an end to the embargo imposed on Iraq was becoming
urgent.
...
First, Saddam Hussein had to be overthrown and replaced by a
government under U.S. control. Without this “regime change” Washington would not
contemplate moving to lift the embargo. Paris and Moscow had been calling for
some time to lift the embargo on the Ba’athist regime, precisely because it was
in their interests and contrary to Washington’s.
Baghdad had granted its two privileged partners—historically France
and Russia—major oil concessions whose implementation depended on ending the
embargo. Given the magnitude of what was at stake in Iraq—the huge market for
rebuilding the country, devastated as it was by 20 years of war and embargo, in
addition to its gigantic oil resources—it was out of the question for
Washington, backed by London for identical reasons, to hand it all on a silver
platter to Paris and Moscow.
...
We know from investigative reports and interviews that some
members of Bush’s team wanted to seize the occasion immediately to go after
Iraq, although they knew full well—whatever they claimed—that Baghdad had
nothing to do with the men who had attacked the World Trade Center and Pentagon.
...
The invasion of Afghanistan was also a chance for the Bush
administration to carry out a project it had cherished since the final collapse
of the Soviet Union. But establishing a direct U.S. military presence in the
heart of ex-Soviet Central Asia had seemed even more improbable than a U.S.
occupation of Iraq.[14]A military presence in the heart of the Eurasian
continental mass joining Russia to China—two countries tempted to ally with each
other in order to resist U.S. hegemonic pressure more effectively,[15] or even
to ally with Iran as well—had evident geostrategic value. Besides, a U.S.
military presence in Central Asia and the Caspian basin (in Uzbekistan,
Kyrgyzstan, Georgia and so on) fit into its global and Middle Eastern strategy
of taking control of sources of oil, supplemented in this particular case by
natural gas.
...
Washington has definitely decided to make a huge effort in order to
rebuild an Iraqi state that would be its loyal vassal and capable of ensuring
neocolonial order under U.S. supervision and the protection of U.S. troops. This
perspective was even the sine qua non for invading the country and overthrowing
Saddam Hussein, as we have already explained. The Bush administration’s curt
attitude toward Paris in particular expressed its determination to exclude
France from any share in the booty. Washington knew that France has some major
trump cards in its rivalry with the United States: its long experience with the
Iraqi market and its standing among Arab peoples, which contrasts sharply with
the general hostility to the U.S.-British tandem.
...
The myth that Washington wants to endow Iraq with a democratic
government that would be a model for the whole region, the myth that the United
States is replaying in Iraq the tape of Germany and Japan’s post-1945
democratization, will not stand up for long to the test of events. In the two
big countries defeated in the Second World War, sizable capitalist classes with
ideological hegemony over their societies were ready to collaborate with the
U.S. occupier and rebuild their countries under its tutelage and with its
aid—all the more willingly because they lived in terror of the “communist”
threat. While allied with the United States, they were still capable of
governing on the basis of genuine electoral majorities.
...
So what remains of the prospects for “democracy” in the Middle
East? In fact the term “democracy” has increasingly given way in official U.S.
statements to the term “freedom,” the term that was used by the way to name the
invasion of Iraq: “Iraqi Freedom.” But what kind of “freedom” is this? George W.
Bush has not delayed passing on the good news to the peoples of the Middle East:
in a speech on May 9, 2003, he proposed to them “the establishment of a
U.S.–Middle East free trade area within a decade”![24]
26.7.05
US Imperial Strategy in the Middle East
US in the Middle East
Thanks for information...
RépondreSupprimerCe commentaire a été supprimé par un administrateur du blog.
RépondreSupprimerAnd the problem is?
RépondreSupprimerIf my choice is control of Iraqi oil by Russia and France versus the US-UK alliance, I go with the latter.
As for the war in Iraq, granted, the reasons for entering the war were distorted and regrettable, but Saddam was a tyrant and a murderer. The insurgents cause the problems by kidnapping and killing the very people who attempt to install infrastucture to make life a little more civilised for the Iraqis.
Although true democracy may not be brought to the region, "freedom" is a hell of a lot better than Saddam Hussein AND the insurgents, no?
And unknown number of dead, but one study says 100,000 as direct or related casualties and you don't know what the problem is?
RépondreSupprimerAnd Saddam? You forgot to mention that he was America's tyrant and murderer and that U.S. support for him increased after his worst crimes. You also forgot to mention that the kidnapping insurgents are a result of the war, not its cause.
OK DJEB.
RépondreSupprimerIf the US pull out of Iraq tomorrow, do you HONESTLY believe the killings will stop?
The chances are highly unlikely. Theyre in Iraq now and thats the way its gonna be for a long time. The killings should never have taken place at all, the war is just an excuse for these sickos to do what they know best.
The only difference is that the killings are now recorded. And yes, it makes so much sense that the insurgents kill their OWN people in protest over military action.
All countries have political agendas and yes, the US has made some appalling allies, but you must remeber that there was a little thing known as the "Cold War". The Soviets had to be stopped and the US even trained the infamous Osama Bin Laden for this very reason. Collateral damage is not limited to the US, Im sure.
I feel so enlightened. Thanks.
You really need to read up on the history of the US and western poicy in the Middle East. I will probably be posting more articles on this subject, but in the mean time, google is a very good tool.
RépondreSupprimer"grand area planning" already in quotes and ready to go into a search engine.
RépondreSupprimerAlso, using Iraq against Iran had nothing to do with the cold war. Similarly, there is no cold war today, yet the U.S. supports the likes of Islam Karimov, to name just one of many brutal tyrants currently cosy with the U.S. And don't mention the TWAT because the U.S. is currently supporting the Mujahideen-e Khalq Organisation (a terrorist organisation).
Also, your goal posts shifted. First you were trying to support the U.S. entrance into war. Now you are saying (as was said during the Vietnam war) that exit would be more disasterous. If it would (I disagree that it necessarily would), that still doesn't justify the original aggression.
I do support the US entrance into the war. I simply regret the lack of transpareny.
RépondreSupprimerIf the US had said, we want Iraqi oil instead of we want to get rid of WMDs I still would have supported them.
Yes, I know your opinion. However, in more than three years of looking, I still have not seen a legitimate cause for war.
RépondreSupprimer"If the US had said, we want Iraqi oil instead of we want to get rid of WMDs I still would have supported them."
Very telling. You support police, whose main job is wealth protection. But when it comes to the theft of Iraqi property, you support that. I shall try as hard as I can not to think of you as a monster, but I can't make any guarantees.
adrian t's breathtaking misreading/rewriting of history past and present led me to believe he was a cretin, a simpleton who accepted the non sequitus regurgitated to the public by a relentless, arrogant tyranical and despotic politicians (on both sides of the pond).
RépondreSupprimerThese comments, "If the US had said, we want Iraqi oil instead of we want to get rid of WMDs I still would have supported them." made me re-evaluate, you are dangerous.
adrian, you must want a never ending, global war; not want safety on the streets of your town for your kids, family and friends, for others. Do you really think the violence will remain on dusty foreign soil far away from you? If you enjoy dictatorships, marshall law and the end to a cushy, safe life as much as you enjoy the idea of state-sanctioned theft and murder, you'll be fine. Don't doubt, as this global war against terror hots up domestically, you get the shitty end of the stick. Unless you are Rumsfeld's son-in-law.
With the institution of recent legislation in the US, giving the President, not the people, total power (stuff the Constitution!), and similar slash and burn policies in the UK, destroying rights going back hundreds of years; Civil Liberties and Human Rights; such compience in the face of obvious wrongdoings will turn round and bite back.
There is only so long before bad Defense Department and MOD choices start showing real negative impact on our country's services and purses. Invading Iraq was illegal under International Law; together with Afghanistan it has been handled so badly as to be V costly and counter-productive. The US-UK axis didn't get bin Laden - dead or alive - or stop terrorism in its tracks or find WMD did they? But by occupying both lands, making token, indigenous-born exiles as new Heads of State, (both ex-Oil Conglomerate players, thus making Bush's thinking obvious) we only created hatred spurred into action, Iraq is now a far better training camp for terrorists than Afghanistan bin Laden could have ever dreamt of.
Once the never-ending global war is in full swing, setting communities against each other in a fight to the death, you won't be seeing the spoils of oil. Non except the political elite will get that privilage. And what will that life be like? Was/is it really worth it?
Bedblogger, I think that the problem is simply that adrian is not very clever.
RépondreSupprimerWith the institution of recent legislation in the US, giving the President, not the people, total power (stuff the Constitution!), and similar slash and burn policies in the UK, destroying rights going back hundreds of years; Civil Liberties and Human Rights; such compience in the face of obvious wrongdoings will turn round and bite back.
You are talking to a neo-fascisti who is cheering all this on. This is a person who has said that all illegal aliens should be shot.