pertinent pointers  
 Welcome, Guest!  |  Login  |  Font Size: Large / Normal Saturday, September 06, 2008 | 07:16 AM  
HOME  PHILOSOPHY SITE TOPICS IRAQ WAR WEB LINKS SEARCH
· About "Us"
· News Roundup
· Newsletters
· Peak Oil
· AvantGo
· News
· Reviews
· Videos
· Stats
· Recommend Us

Untitled Document
Support Us

Untitled Document
Quote

A world in which it is wrong to murder an individual civilian and right to drop a thousand tons of high explosive on a residential area does sometimes make me wonder whether this earth of ours is not a loony bin made use of by some other planet.

-- George Orwell

Untitled Document
Online
We have 12 guests and 0 members online

Welcome Guest, become a member today.

On the Illegitimacy of the Bush War on Iraq

Brendan Lalor | March, 2003; last updated July 31, 2003

 post to the forum on this topic 


The following document is from http://argument.independent.co.uk/commentators/story.jsp?story=370328


Robert Fisk: This looming war isn't about chemical warheads or human rights: it's about oil

Along with the concern for 'vital interests' in the Gulf, this war was concocted five years ago by oil men such as Dick Cheney

Independent - 18 January 2003

I was sitting on the floor of an old concrete house in the suburbs of Amman this week, stuffing into my mouth vast heaps of lamb and boiled rice soaked in melted butter. The elderly, bearded, robed men from Maan – the most Islamist and disobedient city in Jordan – sat around me, plunging their hands into the meat and soaked rice, urging me to eat more and more of the great pile until I felt constrained to point out that we Brits had eaten so much of the Middle East these past 100 years that we were no longer hungry. There was a muttering of prayers until an old man replied. "The Americans eat us now," he said.

Through the open door, where rain splashed on the paving stones, a sharp east wind howled in from the east, from the Jordanian and Iraqi deserts. Every man in the room believed President Bush wanted Iraqi oil. Indeed, every Arab I've met in the past six months believes that this – and this alone – explains his enthusiasm for invading Iraq. Many Israelis think the same. So do I. Once an American regime is installed in Baghdad, our oil companies will have access to 112 billion barrels of oil. With unproven reserves, we might actually end up controlling almost a quarter of the world's total reserves. And this forthcoming war isn't about oil?

The US Department of Energy announced at the beginning of this month that by 2025, US oil imports will account for perhaps 70 per cent of total US domestic demand. (It was 55 per cent two years ago.) As Michael Renner of the Worldwatch Institute put it bleakly this week, "US oil deposits are increasingly depleted, and many other non-Opec fields are beginning to run dry. The bulk of future supplies will have to come from the Gulf region." No wonder the whole Bush energy policy is based on the increasing consumption of oil. Some 70 per cent of the world's proven oil reserves are in the Middle East. And this forthcoming war isn't about oil?

Take a look at the statistics on the ratio of reserve to oil production – the number of years that reserves of oil will last at current production rates – compiled by Jeremy Rifkin in Hydrogen Economy. In the US, where more than 60 per cent of the recoverable oil has already been produced, the ratio is just 10 years, as it is in Norway. In Canada, it is 8:1. In Iran, it is 53:1, in Saudi Arabia 55:1, in the United Arab Emirates 75:1. In Kuwait, it's 116:1. But in Iraq, it's 526:1. And this forthcoming war isn't about oil?

Even if Donald Rumsfeld's hearty handshake with Saddam Hussein in 1983 – just after the Great Father Figure had started using gas against his opponents – didn't show how little the present master of the Pentagon cares about human rights or crimes against humanity, along comes Joost Hilterman's analysis of what was really going on in the Pentagon back in the late 1980s.

Hilterman, who is preparing a devastating book on the US and Iraq, has dug through piles of declassified US government documents – only to discover that after Saddam gassed 6,800 Kurdish Iraqis at Halabja (that's well over twice the total of the World Trade Centre dead of 11 September 2001) the Pentagon set out to defend Saddam by partially blaming Iran for the atrocity.

A newly declassified State Department document proves that the idea was dreamed up by the Pentagon – who had all along backed Saddam – and states that US diplomats received instructions to push the line of Iran's culpability, but not to discuss details. No details, of course, because the story was a lie. This, remember, followed five years after US National Security Decision Directive 114 – concluded in 1983, the same year as Rumsfeld's friendly visit to Baghdad – gave formal sanction to billions of dollars in loan guarantees and other credits to Baghdad. And this forthcoming war is about human rights?

Back in 1997, in the years of the Clinton administration, Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney and a bunch of other right-wing men – most involved in the oil business – created the Project for the New American Century, a lobby group demanding "regime change" in Iraq. In a 1998 letter to President Clinton, they called for the removal of Saddam from power. In a letter to Newt Gingrich, who was then Speaker of the House, they wrote that "we should establish and maintain a strong US military presence in the region, and be prepared to use that force to protect our vital interests [sic] in the Gulf – and, if necessary, to help remove Saddam from power".

The signatories of one or both letters included Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, now Rumsfeld's Pentagon deputy, John Bolton, now under-secretary of state for arms control, and Richard Armitage, Colin Powell's under-secretary at the State Department – who called last year for America to take up its "blood debt" with the Lebanese Hizbollah. They also included Richard Perle, a former assistant secretary of defence, currently chairman of the defence science board, and Zalmay Khalilzad, the former Unocal Corporation oil industry consultant who became US special envoy to Afghanistan – where Unocal tried to cut a deal with the Taliban for a gas pipeline across Afghan territory – and who now, miracle of miracles, has been appointed a special Bush official for – you guessed it – Iraq.

The signatories also included our old friend Elliott Abrams, one of the most pro-Sharon of pro-Israeli US officials, who was convicted for his part in the Iran-Contra scandal. Abrams it was who compared Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon – held "personally responsible" by an Israeli commission for the slaughter of 1,700 Palestinian civilians in the 1982 Sabra and Chatila massacre – to (wait for it) Winston Churchill. So this forthcoming war – the whole shooting match, along with that concern for "vital interests" (ie oil) in the Gulf – was concocted five years ago, by men like Cheney and Khalilzad who were oil men to their manicured fingertips.

In fact, I'm getting heartily sick of hearing the Second World War being dug up yet again to justify another killing field. It's not long ago that Bush was happy to be portrayed as Churchill standing up to the appeasement of the no-war-in Iraq brigade. In fact, Bush's whole strategy with the odious and Stalinist-style Korea regime – the "excellent" talks which US diplomats insist they are having with the Dear Leader's Korea which very definitely does have weapons of mass destruction – reeks of the worst kind of Chamberlain-like appeasement. Even though Saddam and Bush deserve each other, Saddam is not Hitler. And Bush is certainly no Churchill. But now we are told that the UN inspectors have found what might be the vital evidence to go to war: 11 empty chemical warheads that just may be 20 years old.

The world went to war 88 years ago because an archduke was assassinated in Sarajevo. The world went to war 63 years ago because a Nazi dictator invaded Poland. But for 11 empty warheads? Give me oil any day. Even the old men sitting around the feast of mutton and rice would agree with that.


 FAIR USE NOTICE
This site contains material the use of which has not been authorized by the copyright owner. The material is made available in an effort to advance understanding of philosophical, political, and other issues. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml.

contact | report an error | forum | Frontline's "Long Road to War"

Materials in this section of the site for which original source documentation is specified are owned by their respective copyright holders. All the rest of the contents of this section is maintained by, and © 2003-2004, Brendan Lalor.

Terror Level
  Terror Alert Level

Login
 
 Username
 Password
 Remember me


Login Problems?


Newsletter
 
You are currently not logged in, but you can still subscribe to our newsletter.




New Web Links
  · Shields Up! Security site from Gibson Research Corp.
· Go2PDF Free PDF Print Driver
· Stellarium Night Sky (GPL free)
· TruthOut Media Page
· Global Rich List
· Google Earth
· Everest Home Edition
· American Institute of Philanthropy
· Skype - internet telephony
· If Americans Knew: Israeli-Palestinian Statistics

Off the Front Page
  · What is there It Is . org? (May 16, 2005)
· "A Moment of Silence" (Apr 06, 2005)
· Principles of Categorization (Apr 02, 2005)
· The Banality of Evil (Nov 13, 2004)
· Role of Letter Order in Parsing Language (Nov 05, 2004)
· How US trained butchers of Timor (Sep 15, 2004)
· A Note on the Morality of Fictional Wars: Fictum ad Bellum and Fictum in Bello (Sep 13, 2004)
· Can I Get a Job With a Philosophy Degree? (Aug 23, 2004)
· Well-Known Philosophy Majors (Aug 23, 2004)
· THE USES OF PHILOSOPHY (Aug 23, 2004)
· To Beat the Market: Hire a Philosopher (Aug 23, 2004)
· How to Get to the Top -- Study Philosophy (Aug 23, 2004)
· Philosophers Find the Degree Pays Off in Life And in Work (Aug 23, 2004)
· Alabama Gov. Bob Riley says his religious views influenced his push for a tax increase on the wealthy (Aug 18, 2004)
· Metaphor, Morality, and Politics, Or Why Conservatives Have Left Liberals In the Dust (Jul 02, 2004)
· Medicare and Manna from Heaven for Corporations (May 31, 2004)
· Global Population to Level Off? (May 27, 2004)
· Bush PR team covers China stamp with 'Made in U.S.A.' (May 21, 2004)
· Bush praises Sharon's pullout proposal (May 20, 2004)
· The Roots of Torture (May 19, 2004)
· Evangelicals Shape U.S. Foreign Policy (May 13, 2004)
· Brazil's Road to Victory Over U.S. Cotton (May 12, 2004)
· Those Who Deny the Crimes of the Past (May 11, 2004)
· Torture as Normalcy: As American as Apple Pie (May 09, 2004)
· U.S. Suspends Military Aid to Nearly 50 Countries (May 07, 2004)
· Kerry Won't Stop the War; But Independent Action Can (May 07, 2004)
· A carnival of unreason: The Anatomy of Fascism (May 03, 2004)
· Clinton Bombs Sudanese Pharmaceutical Plant (Apr 28, 2004)
· Curtains Ordered for Media Coverage of Returning Coffins (Apr 28, 2004)
· The Dystopic Duo: Sharon & Bush (Apr 27, 2004)

On this day in history ...
  1860
Jane Addams, suffragist and social and peace activist, born, Chicago. Founder of Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), and Hull House.

1869
Major coal mine disaster occurs in Avondale, PA when a fire broke out in a mine shaft, cutting off the workers' only escape route and source of air (the bodies of 110 mine workers are found three days later).

1941
All Jews past the age of six and living in German-held territories are required to wear an identifying Star of David on their clothing.

1991
CIA man Claire E. George is indicted on 10 counts of perjury, false statements and obstruction of justice for his role in the Iran-Contra cover up.



This website is developed and hosted by logoswebpublishing.com; its contents are maintained by, and ? 1999-2005, Brendan Lalor; however, comments posted on thereitis.org are the property of their posters. This site is created, maintained, and served using non-micro$oft products, including Apache, Linux, Perl, MySQL, and PostNuke, a web portal system (under the GNU/GPL license) written in PHP.