THE HIDDEN AGENDA
Slowly, President
Bush's war plan against Iraq is emerging from the thick fog. At first it
looked like a collection of hazy slogans, but gradually it is becoming clear
that it has definite - if hidden - aims.
The plan is
unconnected to the famous "war on terrorism", to the personality of Saddam
Hussein or to the weapons of mass destruction that Iraq is producing, like all
the other states in the region, from Pakistan to Israel and Egypt.
Critics of the war
plans (including myself) have pointed to the disastrous political results that
must be expected: Iraq would break into three parts (Kurds in the north,
Sunnis in the centre, Shi'ites in the south), the Middle East would be exposed
to the onslaught of Iranian fanaticism, pro-Western Arab regimes would
collapse. Israel would be surrounded by aggressive Islamic fundamentalism,
like the Crusader kingdom with the advent of Saladin.
This evaluation is
based on an assumption that has been true for some time: the United States is
not ready to keep large numbers of troops in faraway countries. This would
mean that after the conquest of Iraq the troops would return home, leaving
Iraq to its fate. But it is quite possible that this assumption is not valid
anymore.
The war plan of
the Bushies makes sense only if the US leadership is ready - more than that,
is actually longing for - the occupation of Iraq in order to remain there for
many, many years.
Such an occupation
will necessitate a big investment of troops and resources. It will commit
large military forces for a long time. That is why the plan is opposed by the
American generals (including the secretary of state, General Colin Powell).
But, in the eyes of Bush and his advisers, this is a very worthwhile
investment that would yield immense benefits. Among others:
- The main
objective of the American economy (and therefore of American policy) is the
oil of the Caspian Sea. The exploitation of this gigantic reservoir, the
biggest in the world, has not yet started. Its control will ensure that
America has cheap fuel for decades to come. Bush, a typical oil man who
despises alternative "environment friendly" sources of energy, considers
this a major aim.
- On its way to
the market, the oil must reach the open sea. There are several possible
routes - via Afghanistan and Pakistan or Turkey. Iraq is close to all of
them, and American air and ground forces stationed there will guarantee
American domination over the entire region.
- The existence
of a secure American base in the heart of the Arab world will also enable
Washington to bully all the Arab regimes, lest they stray from the straight
and narrow. The pressure on Saudi Arabia will be immense. Not only will the
American bases in Saudi Arabia become redundant, but by manipulating the oil
prices America could bring the kingdom to the brink of bankruptcy.
- The new
situation would finally break OPEC. Washington will decide the price of oil
and how it is distributed.
- The new
situation will destroy the last remnants of Arab independence. Even today,
almost all the Arab countries are dependent on America. A massive American
physical presence in their midst will put an end to any pretence of Arab
power and unity.
- Neighbouring
Iran, too, will lose its appetite for opposing the American Big Satan. Iran
will be threatened on both sides by the American bases in Afghanistan and
Iraq.
- Total
American control over all the oil resources, from Kazakhstan in the north to
Saudi Arabia in the south, will put an end to any European hopes of
competing with the economic and political might of the United States. He who
controls the oil controls the economy. Increased oil prices might throw
millions of workers into the streets of Europe and East Asia.
How will the
occupation function? When Americans think of occupation, they rely on their
experience in Japan. There, after the capitulation, an American general,
Douglas McArthur, reigned without limits. The Japanese obeyed dutifully,
because they were instructed to do so by their revered emperor, the Mikado.
Now some people in
Washington dream of installing an Iraqi Mikado, somebody from the Hashemite
dynasty that ruled Iraq until 1958, when the last king was murdered. Why not
put another family member on the throne, some relative of the king of Jordan -
or, come to think of it, why not unite Iraq and Jordan under one crown?
A grandiose,
world-embracing, yet simple and logical design. What does it remind me of?
Indeed, the style sounds vaguely familiar. In the early 1980s, I heard about
several plans like this from Ariel Sharon (which I published at the time). His
head was full of grand designs for restructuring the Middle East, the creation
of an Israeli "security zone" from Pakistan to Central Africa, the overthrow
of regimes and installing others in their stead, moving a whole people (the
Palestinians) and so forth.
I can't help it,
but the winds blowing now in Washington remind me of Sharon. I have absolutely
no proof that the Bushies got their ideas from him, even if all of them seem
to have been mesmerised by him. But the style is the same - a mixture of
megalomania, creativity, arrogance, ignorance and superficiality. An explosive
mixture.
Sharon's grand
design floundered, as we know. The bold flights of imagination and the
superficial logic did not help - Sharon simply did not understand the real
currents of history. I fear that the band of Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice,
Wolfowitz, Pearl and all the other little Sharons are suffering from the same
syndrome.
Iraq is not Japan,
and the Iraqis will not obey a Mikado brought in by the Americans as they now
obey a local nationalist dictator. Islamic fundamentalism is not an animal
that can be tamed easily. Hundreds of millions of enraged human beings all
over the Arab and Muslim world are a great danger, even for a mighty military
power.
Sharon may believe
that he will be the big winner of such an American move, though history may
show that he brought a historical disaster on us. He may succeed in exploiting
the ensuing anarchy in order to drive the Palestinians out of the country. But
within a few years Israel could find itself surrounded by a new Middle East -
and not the one Shimon Peres is drivelling on about. A region full of hatred,
dreaming of revenge, driven by religious and nationalist fanaticism. And, in
the end, the Americans will go home. We will be left here alone.
But people like
Bush and Sharon do not march to the beat of history. They are listening to a
different drummer.
SOURCE :
http://www.redress.btinternet.co.uk/uavnery16.htm