Home · Links · News · Voices · Action · Donate · Mission · Archives · Books · Submissions · Videos · Past News

Voices

05/29/07

Permalink 04:00:00 pm, Categories: Voices, 1031 words    

WITHDRAWAL SYMPTOMS

Terrence E. Paupp

By May 23, 2007 it became clear that the Democrats were little better than the Republicans when given the task of ending the Iraq War. Like their Republican counterparts, the Democrats took on the mantle of Bush-enablers by granting him another $95 billion dollars supplemental authorization to keep the war going. Not until September 2007 would the matter of funding the Iraq War come home to roost in the Congress.

Why did this happen? The dirty truth is that both political parties are hooked on an addiction to Iraqi oil. So, both parties are now filled with imperialists. That is right---oil-addicted imperialists. The great majority in Congress have signed on to the Bush administration’s agenda of stealing Iraq’s oil resources and placing permanent US military bases in that country to guarantee uninterrupted access regardless of the cost in blood or treasure. It all started in 2003 when Bush assigned Paul Bremer to be the head of the Coalitional Provisional Authority (CPA).

In violation of international law, Bremer started issuing orders on how the Iraqi economy would be run and who would get what. Bremer began to organize what the Bush administration wanted for the whole region---privatization. Never mind the fact that Bremer’s illegal orders also created the basis for the current civil war in Iraq. Insofar as different ethnic groups would stand to benefit more than others from the new arrangements it was clear that some groups would be cut out all together. Hence, the Bush supported Maleki government is a propped up hoax that is unrepresentative of the interests of millions of Iraqi citizens who have been disenfranchised within their new “democratic” state.

Foreign owned business and enterprise would be empowered to ignore the limitations imposed by a now defunct Iraqi Constitution that prohibited the sale of the nation’s resources to foreigners. In short, profits were to be had as the Bush administration pushed for a Free Trade Area (FTA) that would extend throughout the Middle East. It was not really designed to bring democracy, in the sense of a political opening for the unrepresented and excluded of the region. Rather, it was a democratization of Iraq’s oil resources so that privatized firms, such as Dick Cheney’s Halliburton could capitalize on new economic arrangements that leave the Iraqi people with growing unemployment and deprive them of the oil revenues of their own nation. Iraq may have as much as 300 billion barrels of oil untapped. With oil headed toward $70 dollars a barrel, the oil wealth of Iraq could be worth as much as $21 trillion. Hence, here we have the real rationale of an endless occupation.

Never mind the fact that over 60 percent of the American public wants the war to end now. That is what the November 2006 elections were supposed to be about. Those elections gave the Democrats a mandate to develop a spine and stand up to the Liar-in-Chief about the Iraq War. What happened? They started to play politics with the Republican rope-a-dope strategy of “support our troops.” Never mind the fact that real support for the troops would be to bring them home after 4 tours of duty and keep them alive from the bullets and RPG launchers that have come to symbolize the nature of the civil war. Never mind the fact that over 500-million Iraqi citizens have been killed since the war began. In fact, when one examines the death toll of civilian dead you come to realize that some citizens were needless by our own troops in the village of Hidatha and in the prison at Abu Ghraib.

So, what was the plan to begin with? Was it to remove WMDs? Was it to spread democracy in the Middle East? Or was it really another chance for the West to play the “Great Game”---try to control Eurasia and all of the oil down to the Persian Gulf. Some historians and commentators track the strategy back to the late 1970s when President Jimmy Carter announced the Carter-Doctrine in a State of the Union Message. It was a declaration in the spirit of the Monroe Doctrine. If any nation or power should seek to cut off American access to the oil supplies of the Middle East, military action would be taken in order to forestall or eliminate such a threat. Bush has merely fulfilled what the Carter Doctrine promised.

Yet, the Bush strategy really has not succeeded because the course it took in Iraq amounts to what the policy wonks call a “failed strategy.” Well, that analysis merely gets us to military strategy and tactics. It simply critiques the failure of an imperial policy. It conveniently ignores the dirty truth that the grand strategy of the Great Game is one of imperialism and establishing American hegemony over both the Middle East and from there the rest of the globe. For if the US can deny the Russians and Chinese access to new energy sources, then the US can put a stop to the threat of two potential rivals or Hegemons that might be capable of moving in on America’s control of both the Middle East and the world.

The political elites of the US political and financial establishment want control of Iraq, the Persian Gulf, the Caspian Sea, and the rest of Eurasia. These US elites will do anything to block off Russian and Chinese efforts to profit from the energy reserves of the Middle East. In geopolitical terms the American strategy is one of seeking to maintain hegemony---unchallenged control over the region and the international economy. In that sense, both parties have suffered withdrawal symptoms when it comes to leaving Iraq. Both parties are too addicted to oil and to a strategy of imperialism that sustains the addiction. In the meantime, democratic representation in the United States and in Iraq is virtually dead.

-###-

The American Empire is Failing – A Good Thing for America and the World An interview with Terry Paupp by Kevin Zeese.

May 29, 2007 Terrence Paupp is a Senior Fellow at the Council on Hemispheric Affairs and author of the recent book, Exodus From Empire: The Fall of America’s Empire and the Rise of the Global Community (Pluto Press, 2007).

Comments, Pingbacks:

Comment from: alan2102 [Member]

"Iraq may have as much as 300 billion barrels of oil untapped. With oil headed toward $70 dollars a barrel, the oil wealth of Iraq could be worth as much as $21 trillion."

For the record, those lines were from a brief that Dennis Kucinich posted several
days ago. (kucinich.us, I think)

What strikes me about those figures is this: $21 trillion U.S. is approximately
half the sum of unfunded U.S. fedgov liabilities -- S.S. and Medicare -- for the boomer
generation, estimated at in the vicinity of $40 trillion U.S. Some estimates put the
unfunded liabilities at $60 trillion. It depends on various assumptions, and it is hard
to project that far out. Suffice to say that the sum is enormous, and on that order.
Plus there is no reason to think that oil will stay at $70/barrel. With peak production
probably happening about now, and with relentlessly rising demand in the face of what
will be relentlessly falling production, the price can and will go to twice that and
more, eventually; i.e. $140/barrel and beyond. At $140/barrel, Iraq's oil wealth would
pay for the entirety of the unfunded fedgov liability, going by the $40 trillion
estimate. Of course, it is a circular deal wherein when oil goes to $140/barrel,
then everything else will become more expensive -- including medical care, food, etc.
Hence even Iraq's phenomenal oil wealth will not be enough to take care of the boomers
in the manner to which they've become accustomed. Nevertheless it would make a huge
contribution. Iraq's oil wealth would (will?!) probably be sufficient to stave-off
economic disaster in the U.S. for at least a couple of decades.

So, it is a curious and unpleasant fact that we need Iraq's oil wealth to float the
U.S. economy, and to allow the U.S. fedgov to make good on all the promises that
it made (i.e. that the long succession of Santy Claus politicians made) over
the last five decades or so. From this angle, the U.S.' actions are rational
and even necessary -- "necessary" assuming that keeping already-rich people quite rich
in their retirement is the dominant priority. From this angle, the military-industrial
complex, and the neocon's thrust in the ME and globally, make perfect sense. You might
even say that if the neocons, and the U.S. military machine, and the U.S.' imperial
policies generally, had not existed, then we would have had to create them -- if we
wanted to stay rich. By "rich" I mean (say) an income of upwards of $20K/year.

This puts such protestations as "No blood for oil!" in a new light. Yes, blood is
being spilled for oil, but the oil is what makes for the S.S. checks and the
Medicare coverage. We can't have it both ways: being rich AND renouncing war and
fostering justice. We have to choose one or the other. As the late Paul Tsongas used
to say, when explaining why it would be necessary for everyone to make very tough
sacrifices in order to get the debt monster under control: "I am not Santa Claus".
Tsongas didn't have a chance in electoral politics; everyone votes for Santy Claus.

Perhaps there is a subconscious realization of this in the
population at large, explaining why the anti-war movement is, shall we say, less than
fully robust. Perhaps at some level everyone knows that to end the war is to
commit to a path that will leave everyone a lot poorer. That's a very tough thing
to do -- to volunteer for an economically-spare (or sparER) future, for the sake
of justice and peace. It requires character, which has not been in great oversupply
in the U.S. or the modern world in general, it is my impression.


Permalink 06/01/07 @ 21:13

Posts by day of the Month

September 2008
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
<<  <   >  >>
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30          

Search

Archive

Newsletter

Your E-mail:

Just Foreign Policy Iraqi Death Estimator





Syndicate this blog XML

What is RSS?

thepeoplesvoice.org

FAIR USE NOTICE: This site contains copyrighted articles and information about environmental, political, human rights, economic, democratic, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. This news and information is displayed without profit for educational purposes, in accordance with, Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107 of the US Copyright Law. Thepeoplesvoice.org is a non-advocacy internet web site, edited by non-affiliated U.S. citizens. editor

Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS! Valid RSS! Valid Atom! b2evolution