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| subject: | Oil Is America`s Motive For War |
Oil is America's motive for war
All around the world people ask: What is the real motive for the Bush
administration's threatened war with Iraq? Is it to curb weapons of mass
destruction? Is it more personal, an act of vengeance by a son against
the man who attempted to assassinate his father? Is it to defend Israel?
Is it to reinvent the Middle East as a more democratic region, as many
of the Bush administration's leading voices insist? Or is it, as some
suspect, so that America can get its hands on Iraqi oil?
The Bush administration has offered a range of justifications for its
plans, although with a fairly consistent emphasis on weapons of mass
destruction. Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz talks about
making Iraq the "first Arab democracy." Many in the Bush administration
argue that aggressive policies toward Iraq can ultimately bring down
autocratic governments in the Middle East the same way that the Reagan
administration supposedly brought down the "evil" Soviet empire.
Outside of America, almost nobody buys these arguments. Most believe
that oil ranks at the top of America's list of motives. Short of the
U.S. national security archives suddenly falling open, we are unlikely
to find a definitive account of the president's innermost thoughts.
Moreover, different U.S. officials certainly have different priorities.
President Bush may focus on weapons of mass destruction; Mr. Wolfowitz
may target democracy. Others may have their eyes firmly on the prize of
Iraqi oil.
A more fruitful question than an inquiry into America's motives is how
the United States will act once war comes. Here we don't have to rely
on second-guessing individuals. We can examine America's behavior in
recent history.
Looking at the historical record, it is difficult to believe that the
United States will give the Middle East a democratic makeover. Today's
Middle East is a construction of the United States and Europe. Its despots
and monarchs owe their positions to the machinations and connivance of
the West. Even if America goes off to war waving the banner of democracy,
the results are likely to be less glorious. In the end, this will likely
be a war for Iraqi oil.
Throughout the 20th century, Arab self-determination, democracy and
economic reform took a back seat to oil. When the British inveigled
Arab chieftains to fight on behalf of the British empire in World War
I, the Arabs were not rewarded with sovereignty at the Great War's end,
but with ongoing British and French suzerainty.
Whenever real democracy in the Middle East threatened American
control over oil reserves, democracy was jettisoned. Consider
the CIA-backed coup against Iranian Prime Minister Mussadegh.
In 1951, Mussadegh nationalized Iran's oil industry, prompting
a British boycott the next year and then U.S.-backed intervention
(which toppled and jailed the popular prime minister) in 1953.
A similarly instructive case is the West's support for a military
crackdown in Algeria after democratic elections in early 1992
threatened to bring the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) to power.
When the FIS seemed headed to victory, Algeria's army stepped in
to prevent continuation of the vote. Western governments, led by
France but with U.S. backing, gave moral and financial support
to Algeria's generals.
American behavior in former Soviet Central Asia is equally vivid.
Many in the Bush administration point to its work in this region
as a showcase for how they will reshape the Middle East. Yet
democracy has absolutely nothing to do with American policy in
Central Asia, where U.S. oil companies and diplomats trip over
each other promoting deals in despotic Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan
and Uzbekistan.
A good window on postwar U.S. policy in Iraq can be found in key
documents written by and for the Bush administration before Sept.
11, when the analysis of the Middle East was much less infected by
today's fears. Probably the most interesting document is a study
entitled "Strategic Energy Policy Challenges of the 21st Century,"
produced by the James Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice
University in Texas and the Council on Foreign Relations.
The study makes clear two points. First, Iraq is vital to oil flows
from the Middle East, as it sits on the second-largest reserves in
the world. The report agonizes over the fact that for economic security
reasons America needs Iraqi oil, but that for military security reasons
the United States can't allow Saddam to develop the oil. The implication
seems clear: The United States needs a new Iraqi regime for its energy
security. Democracy is not mentioned anywhere in the study.
This document also provides an interesting glimpse into the
preoccupations of officials like Vice President Dick Cheney and
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. Both men entered national
leadership under President Gerald Ford in 1974, during the Arab
oil embargo, which unleashed huge economic shocks that doomed
Ford's presidency. The "Strategic Energy Policy Challenges" study
puts enormous weight on the threats of a similar disruption today.
The 1970s embargo was evidently a defining moment in the strategic
thinking of Cheney and Rumsfeld.
The Bush administration may believe that it is going to war to fight
for democracy in the Middle East, but U.S. support for real democracy
stands to be an early victim. Sadly, a war fought for oil will be one
that further destabilizes international politics and society, and
undermines the true security of the United States and the world.
Jeffrey D. Sachs is professor of economics and director of the Earth
Institute at Columbia University. - Ed.
By Jeffrey Sachs
2003.01.31
-==-
Source: Korea Herald .....
http://www.koreaherald.co.kr/SITE/data/html_dir/2003/01/31/200301310023.asp
Cheers, Steve..
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