The official reasons -- the threat posed to the U.S. and its allies by Saddam Hussein's alleged programmes of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and the possibility that he would pass along those arms to al Qaeda -- have long since been discarded by the overwhelming weight of the evidence, or, more precisely, the lack of evidence that such a threat ever existed. 
Liberating Iraq from the tyranny of Hussein's particularly unforgiving and bloodthirsty version of Ba'athism and thus setting an irresistible precedent that would spread throughout the Arab world -- a theme pushed by the administration of President George W. Bush mostly after the invasion, as it became clear that the officials reasons could not be justified -- appears to have been the guiding obsession of really only one member of the Bush team, and not a particularly influential one at that: Deputy Defence Secretary Paul Wolfowitz.
Then there's the theory that Bush -- whose enigmatic psychology, particularly his relationship to his father, has already provided grist for several book-publishing mills -- wanted to show up his dad for failing to take Baghdad in 1991. Or he sought to "finish the job" that his dad had begun in 1991; and/or avenge his dad for Hussein's alleged (but highly questionable) assassination attempt against Bush I in Kuwait after the war.
Because Bush was the ultimate "Decider", as he himself has put it, and because no one who ever served at top levels in the administration has ever been able to say precisely when (let alone why) the decision was made to invade Iraq, this explanation cannot be entirely dismissed as an answer.
Then there is the question of oil. Was the administration acting on behalf of an oil industry desperate to get its hands on Mesopotamian oil that had long been denied it as a result of U.N. and unilateral sanctions prohibiting business between U.S. companies and Hussein?
Given both Bush's and Vice President Dick Cheney's long-standing ties to the industry and former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan's assertion in his recent memoir that "The Iraq war is largely about oil," this theory has definite appeal -- particularly to those on the left who made "No Blood for Oil" a favourite mantra at anti-war protests in the run-up to the invasion, just as they did -- with much greater plausibility -- before the 1991 Gulf War.
The problem, however, is that there is little or no evidence that Big Oil, an extremely cautious beast in the global corporate menagerie, favoured a war, particularly one carried out in a way (unilaterally) that risked destabilising the world's most oil-rich region, especially Saudi Arabia and the emirates.
On the contrary, the Rice University Institute that bears the name of former Secretary of State James Baker -- a man who has both represented and embodied Big Oil throughout his long legal career -- publicly warned early on that if Bush absolutely, positively had to invade Iraq for whatever reason, he should not even consider it unless two conditions were met: 1) that the action was authorised by the U.N. Security Council; and 2) that nothing whatever be done after the invasion to suggest that the motivation had to do with the acquisition by U.S. oil companies of Iraq's oil resources.
That is not to say that oil was irrelevant to the administration's calculations, but perhaps in a different sense than that meant by the "No Blood for Oil" slogan. After all, oil is an absolutely indispensable requirement for running modern economies and militaries. And the invasion was a forceful -- indeed, a shock- and awe-some -- demonstration to the rest of the world, especially potential strategic rivals like China, Russia, or even the European Union, of Washington's ability to quickly and effectively conquer and control an oil-rich nation in the heart of the energy-rich Middle East/Gulf region any time it wishes, perhaps persuading those lesser powers that challenging the U.S. could well prove counter-productive to long-term interests, if not their supply of energy in the short term.
Indeed, a demonstration of such power could well be the fastest way to formalise a new international order based on the overwhelming military power of the United States, unequalled at least since the Roman Empire. It would be a "unipolar world" of the kind envisaged by the 1992 draft Defence Planning Guidance (DPG) commissioned by then-Pentagon chief Dick Cheney, overseen by Wolfowitz and Cheney's future chief of staff, I. Lewis Libby, and contributed to by future ambassador to "liberated" Afghanistan and Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad and Bush's deputy national security adviser, J.D. Crouch.
It was that same vision that formed the inspiration for the 27 charter signatories -- a coalition of aggressive nationalists, neo-conservatives, and Christian Right leaders that included Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Libby, Khalilzad, and several other future senior Bush administration national-security officials -- of the Project for the New American Century (PNAC) in 1997. It was the same project that began calling for "regime change" in Iraq in 1998 and that, nine days after the 9/11 attack on New York and the Pentagon, publicly warned that any "war on terror" that excluded Hussein's elimination would necessarily be incomplete.
In retrospect, it seems clear that Iraq had long been seen by this group, which became empowered first by Bush's election and then super-charged by 9/11, as the first, easiest and most available step toward achieving a "Pax Americana" that would not only establish the U.S. once and for all as the dominant power in the region, but whose geo-strategic implications for aspiring "peer competitors" would be global in scope.
For the neo-conservative and the Christian Right members of this group, who were its most eager and ubiquitous war boosters, Israel would also be a major beneficiary of an invasion.
According to a 1996 paper drafted by prominent hard-line neo-conservatives -- including some, like Douglas Feith and David Wurmser, who would later serve in senior posts in Cheney's office and the Pentagon in the run-up to the invasion -- ousting Hussein and installing a pro-Western leader was the key to destabilising Israel's Arab enemies and/or bending them to its will. This would permit the Jewish state not only to escape the Oslo peace process, but also to secure as much of the occupied Palestinian (and Syrian) territories as it wished.
Indeed, getting rid of Hussein and occupying Iraq would not only tighten Israel's hold on Arab territories, in this view; it could also threaten the survival of the Arab and Islamic worlds' most formidable weapon against Israel -- OPEC -- by flooding the world market with Iraqi oil and forcing the commodity's price down to historic lows.
That's how it looked five years ago anyway.
Copyright © 2008 IPS-Inter Press Service.
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53 Comments so far
Show AllDan March 20th, 2008 10:23 am
In addition to the "A Clean Break" strategy paper of 1996,
there is this from the British Jane's Intelligence Digest:
http://www.janes.com/security/international_security/news/fr/fr030416_1_...
"Oil from Iraq : An Israeli pipedream?"
Have a look at the list of authors for "A Clean Break", and then look at the person who cooked up the bogus intel on Iraq. One Douglas J. Feith.
I am looking on the bright side here--if Stielitz is right about the true cost of this war $3 trillion, seems that US empire has a good chance of going the way of the Soviet Union which allegedly collapsed because they could not sustain the obscene military spending of the Cold War---it brought them down. Maybe for all it's heartache and devastation---especially to the people of IRaq---this hideous war will have served a valuable purpose---elimination of the the last military superpower on the planet. Our military is funded by borrowed money---seems like all the rest of the world has to do is call in the debts---it would be a gift to the entire planet!
Uhhh... to get rid of Saddam and grab the oil?
George W. Bush, his father, and Bill Clinton all wanted to overthrow Sadaam Hussein. Dad initiated the sanctions, bombed the Iraqis and drove them out of Kuwait hoping to weaken his rule.
Clinton continued the sanctions and ordered some limited bombing of Iraq during his tenure as president. He was just as harsh on the Iraqis as his predecessor and unlike his successor he kept the loss of American lives close to zero.
So it is reasonable to assume that when George W. Bush took the presidency from Clinton he probably concluded that since Saddam had successfully survived 8 years of pressure by Clinton that he would not be any more successful than Clinton had been, unless he changed course.
If Clinton had not done it by killing hundreds of thousands of Iraqis maybe a new approach was needed.
So he upped the ante by invading Iraq.
From this perspective all three of these presidents maintained a continual war, overt or covert, which has cost the lives of innumerable Iraqis and Americans.
This analysis changes the question to "Why did three presidents try to overthrow the government of Iraq?"
James A Lucas
3/20/08
"Is it too extreme to cancel cable, give away my TV, and read books from authors who study peace and harmony? The best thing I can do is live the most peaceful, positive life, and hope to influence one other person.
This might be the wrong message board for these types of comments, if so, apologies. However, on the 5th anniversary of the Iraq invasion, this might resonate with some people."
andrews,
It resonates with me.
In the end, all you can do is all you can do. For all the gnashing of teeth and crystal ball gazing, all anyone can do is to live their life as close to their true beliefs as possible.
You asked whether cutting cable is too extreme. Well, I haven't had cable for many years and rarely watch TV. Still, I don't live a life that's strictly in accordance with my beliefs, so I continue to try to do that. It's a struggle, but a good struggle.
Keep living your peaceful, positive life. It means more than you can know.
i long thought it was the oil, but slowly started to accept the fact that it was mainly driven by Israeli interests. There's certainly other players who stood to benefit, but none of the others had the quantity of passionate presence in the white house, the bipartisan passionate support within and access to the Congress, strong media access and favorable bias and of course, none of the others have the religious zeal as well as being unencumbered by the patriotic second thoughts that some of the other interests may have had to grapple with. None has benefitted as has Israel. It is verboten to talk about this still, note how this author carefully dances around the charge, nevertheless it is too compelling of a rationale to ignore.
In addition to the "A Clean Break" strategy paper of 1996,
there is this from the British Jane's Intelligence Digest:
http://www.janes.com/security/international_security/news/fr/fr030416_1_...
"Oil from Iraq : An Israeli pipedream?
16 April 2003
Israel stands to benefit greatly from the US led war on Iraq, primarily by getting rid of an implacable foe in President Saddam Hussein and the threat from the weapons of mass destruction he was alleged to possess. But it seems the Israelis have other things in mind.
An intriguing pointer to one potentially significant benefit was a report by Haaretz on 31 March that minister for national infrastructures Joseph Paritzky was considering the possibility of reopening the long-defunct oil pipeline from Mosul to the Mediterranean port of Haifa. With Israel lacking energy resources of its own and depending on highly expensive oil from Russia, reopening the pipeline would transform its economy.
To resume supplies from Mosul to Haifa would require the approval of whatever Iraqi government emerges and presumably the Jordanian government, through whose territory it would be likely to run. Paritzky's ministry was reported to have said on 9 April that it would hold discussions with Jordanian authorities on resuming oil supplies from Mosul, with one source saying the Jordanians were "optimistic". Jordan, aware of the deep political sensitivities involved, immediately denied there were any such talks.
Paritzky said he was certain the USA would respond favourably to the idea of resurrecting the pipeline. Indeed, according to Western diplomatic sources in the region, the USA has discussed this with Iraqi opposition groups.
It is understood from diplomatic sources that the Bush administration has said it will not support lifting UN sanctions on Iraq unless Saddam's successors agree to supply Israel with oil.
All of this lends weight to the theory that Bush's war is part of a masterplan to reshape the Middle East to serve Israel's interests. Haaretz quoted Paritzky as saying that the pipeline project is economically justifiable because it would dramatically reduce Israel's energy bill.
US efforts to get Iraqi oil to Israel are not surprising. Under a 1975 Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), the US guaranteed all Israel's oil needs in the event of a crisis. The MoU, which has been quietly renewed every five years, also committed the USA to construct and stock a supplementary strategic reserve for Israel, equivalent to some US$3bn in 2002. Special legislation was enacted to exempt Israel from restrictions on oil exports from the USA.
Moreover, the USA agreed to divert oil from its home market, even if that entailed domestic shortages, and guaranteed delivery of the promised oil in its own tankers if commercial shippers were unwilling or not available to carry the crude to Israel. All of this adds up to a potentially massive financial commitment.
The USA has another reason for supporting Paritzky's project: a land route for Iraqi oil direct to the Mediterranean would lessen US dependence on Gulf oil supplies. Direct access to the world's second-largest oil reserves (with the possibility of expansion through so-far untapped deposits) is an important strategic objective."
The same set of lies that started the war are alive and well among the populace! I hear them spouted regularly by the ignorant. The one I hear most often is 'if we don't fight them over there we will be fighting them here'! It makes me go ballistic when I hear it. What do these American's honestly think????? Do they honestly believe that a band of maybe 6000 terrorist's is going to set sail and invade the US????? The notion is so ludicrous it defies logic! All these small group of terrorist's can do is work to destroy the US from within. And Bush is helping them at every turn. But, people have been spoon fed this BS to where they don't know up from down! There is no reasoning with most of them. In a lot of ways it's disheartening. Because no one is able to cut through the lies the Bush Administration has told to find the truth that is being buried in there. There is no way of dispelling all the lies until there is some help from the media. We all know that's never going to happen. The Republican party has a strangle hold on them. So I see the main obstacle to ending Iraq as being Republican! They need to be brought down and defeated at all costs. The country is never going to get straightened out until they are gone.
Why did the US invade iraq? Oil and money.
Why did the US invade Iraq?
Well, duh... that's where the oil is.
The most sinister use of FBI NSL power has been to create local,state, and Federal spy network watch groups.
They come into a community,pick out a suspect,real or not, use NSLS to create fear in the community about an individual, then help the community build an organized ,24/7 gang stalking survielence unit. You can not have a Nation wide spy network if you do not build one from fear.
Thier goal is to indoctrinate,train, and build a loyal group of brain washed SUPERMAN type followers.People who feel they are helping to keep America safe.These people are not very bright or independent, and can easily be fooled into false service
They actully where superman shirts,superman vanity car plates,and spiderman shirts.Drive cars with misalinged headlights,honk horns to signal each other.It is a sick bunch of poeple that become addicted to the thrill of trashing the targtes life.Sometmes the target comit suicde.But the group has been told that the target is dangerous and unstable, so they don't know that they are the ones that have created the self destruction.
This is no joke.
Thousands of Americans are being victomized daily 24/7 by over zealous,right wing , religous do gooders, that play a large role in these groups.
They are often led by Firefighters and Paramedics, that use there truck sirens to warn gang stalkers groups of any movemnet by suspects as they leave thier home.
They make no effort to conceal thier survielence, thier goal is to disrupt , psychologicaly destroy thier victom while training thier Natzi spy network.
Firefighter and Paramedics are a logical choise for thier leadership, they are trained as first responders, natural super hero types, they have the time to orchestrate the survielence when they are not serving the public .
I believe if you check the USA Patriot Act , they have been given the power to do what I have described above.
America is in Deep trouble , a black cloud is over us,being held in place by right wing religous zealots.This is being done to control us , so that the corporate eliete can justify the war and any thing else they want to do.
America is not the land of the Free, it is the land of Spys.
God ,help Americans Save the constitution, once we have done so , he will bless us all.
Stop this War, trash the Patriot Act, it is anything but that, and jail this Natzi network.
WAKE UP AMERICA !!!!!
BINGO! LOBE presents an excellent argument. I quite fully agree with him, but while having comments that can be stated on some points in the article; as well as a few that the article doesn't mention.
ISRAEL, yes, it is a 'beneficiary', but surely is not the reason for war on Iraq. Those who planned and really commanded this war of aggression may have really thought of Israel "benefiting", but surely would not have launched this hugely expensive war for the sake of Israel. And that the Israeli govt and its elites "benefit" from and have fully sided with this war is co-incidental, surely. Cheerleaders also benefit from what they cheerlead for, but they still are only part of the cheerleading group.
I agree that Big Oil would've preferred for the war to not be committed, but Big Oil still is going to work, and en masse, to profit asap from Iraq's oil resources. They're surely pigs waiting in line to get at these troughs, and that, imo, will make them profiteers of war of aggression. And they're already profiting plenty with the skyrocketed prices for oil.
Still, they likely wouldn't have wanted this war to be committed, which is a plus for them.
Saddam Hussein, however, was NOT an enemy of Israel; not really, that is. The situation was the opposite. Israel's hypocrisy and hegemony towards Iraq and other countries of the Middle East made Israel their as well as its own enemy; creating foes when there wouldn't have been any, if Israel had been respectful, instead of hellishly hypocritical, hegemonic, insane. F.e., Israel bombed a nuclear plant in Iraq in the early 1980s. Meanwhile, Israel is one of the most nuclear armed countries in the world and refuses to abide by intl laws, rejects the NPT, and so on.
With regards to Palestine, Saddam Hussein tried to DEFEND human rights, trying to defend, f.e., innocent and very defenceless Palestinians against hell-on-earth-rogue Israel. That was NOT Saddam's fault; it was entirely and criminally the fault of Israel. Saddam was the or one of the few honourable state leaders to ACT in defence of extremely and criminally aggressed Palestine, and there was nothing wrong on his part in this. When he tried to help Palestinians with financial aid, f.e., hellbent Israel again "acted up".
Israel [is] its very worst enemy; it needs no others in order to have enemies. The USA also is its (and Israel's) worst enemy, except, and for some time longer anyway, it is also the military superpower of the world, which of course benefits Israel [again]. If that status is ever lost, then ... danger, danger, and the populations of both of these countries may then get a "taste of their own (govts') medicines"; maybe.
Confucius wisely said to not do to others what we don't want done to ourselves; while Jesus of Nazareth wisely said to do for ohers what we'd want done for ourselves.
"Do not to others that which you would not want done to yourself" means that what we do wrongfully to others may then be done to us; deservedly so, and we'd have been the cause.
"Do for others that which you want done for yourself" also means, among other things, that if you wish to have your human rights and dignity respected, then do the same for others!
Israel and the U.S. totally disregard or reject what these two wise men said and which should be a rule for living for ALL of us.
So, again, Israel and the USA [are] their own very worst enemies.
Anyway, Lobe omitted mention of the MIC, military-industrial complex, which [always] profits from war; profits en masse, too. Canada, f.e., had an outspoken CEO of a Canadian MIC corporation demand (in public news media, too!) that then PM Chretien fully embark CAF in the war on Iraq, claiming that if this wasn't done, then the firm he managed, CAE, Canadian Aeronautics Engineering, would not get future contracts from the USA. But U.S. MIC most surely lusts for the U.S. warring on others too, and they're a big push in this; even if they aren't then leading, then they're still and certainly not going to oppose.
Other business elites also want war. Canada has some Business Club, either the Business Club of Canada, or of Toronto, and I believe based in Toronto. The head or some high-level member of this "club" similarly argued (also in public news media!) for PM Chretien to fully embark CAF in the war on Iraq; using the same arguments, only without referring to any specific Canadian corporation or industry sector, speaking of it all in general terms.
I should get both of their jobs; they'd be a 'breeze' to replace, a real sinch. After all, they're clearly brainless, for they're clearly heartless, and the brain needs a functioning heart. Damn MORONS! :)
Banking and I guess other financial industry or sector elites are known to at least often be interested in profiting from war too. There's plenty about this on the Internet.
Lastly, an article that more than strongly complement's Lobe's is the one by Scott Ritter and posted here at CD on March 18th.
"Published on Tuesday, March 18, 2008 by TruthDig.com
Dinner With Ahmed
by Scott Ritter"
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/03/18/7738
THAT IS A VERY IMPORTANT ARTICLE. Lobe's is excellent, but Ritter's is one I believe to be not only excellent, but also more, if not much more, important; it definitely [reveals] information we did not previously have reporting on, very incriminating for several elites of U.S. politics and particularly the Repub. Party, too. It [is] [essential] reading.
Lobe isn't revealing information that hasn't been reported by reputable source people for several years already, but it nonetheless is a very good, important, and appreciated, welcome reminder, and is very well stated, imo. It just doesn't state anything that wasn't already reported, and omits to mention some things or points covered by plenty of reputable analysts.
Both are bookmarked for my personal library.
I am against the single factor explinations of these types of operations. Oil, desire for bases to militarily control ME, protect Israel, Israel lobby strength in the US, rivalry with China/Russia/EU, internal economic weakness, macho stupidity, Bush's psych, Saddam's, there are a miriad of factors which played into this decision.
Another likely conscious goal of the war is to destroy the United States of America.
Big_Money March 19th, 2008 11:53 am
Hm, no mention of Iraq getting all set up to sell oil in currencies other than U$… Hence no mention of Iran gearing up to do the same… I find it difficult to get to the bottom of this painful issue without even mentioning the elephant in the room - that US world dominance is utterly dependant on their ability to issue currency with reckless abandon. Once it stops being the de-facto stuff of the bulk of all transactions worldwide, the "supply overhang" that has built up over the last 35 years is gonna come (is coming?) crashing down, and the US will have to return to good old fashioned production. No more getting rich just by fostering innovative monetary vehicles. Do you doubt this? I'd strongly advise that you open your eyes.
Are you suggesting it was the International Knitting Cartel?
Tsunami March 19th, 2008 3:57 pm
Hats off to the author. He touched on a point that is shunned by the mass majority….ISRAEL. That is probably the #1 reason for Bush's action. Heck, the USA could have purchased all the oil in the U.A.E., Qatar, Sadia Arabia, Kuwait, and Iraq, for the money that has been spent on murder and destruction in Iraq alone.
Dare I mention Dominik Suter? It is certainly ironic that after resigning in protest over having his investigations into terrorist attacks thwarted, John Patrick O'Neill, a top American anti-terrorism expert who worked as a special agent and eventually Assistant Deputy Director of Investigation until late 2001 for the FBI, died the first day on his new job as head of security at the WTC. I would like to know what O'Neill had to say at the CFR's Kissinger Roundtable on Terrorism when he talked about the Cole investigation.
canuckchuck March 19th, 2008 12:08 pm
Does anyone really believe that an administration that would coldly murder over a million Iraqis, and send 4000 of its own soldiers to their doom without proper equipment and planning, and boldly lie abouts is reasons, would hesitate for a second to murder 3000 of its own people in order to move its plan forward?
Have a look at A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm and Catastrophic Terrorism: Elements of a National Policy.
Commencement Address at the U.S. Military Academy, West Point Remarks by Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, Michie Stadium, West Point, NY, Saturday, June 02, 2001 should also prove enlightening.
I hesitate to mention Professor Jones's work for fear of banishment from this site.
Long Live the Empire!
*******************************************
"Oily to bed, Oily to rise,
makes a man ...well...
wealthy."
Key phrases:
"Peak Oil."
"False Flag Operation - 9/11."
Jim has given us one the most cogent essays yet about the run up to the wa.... er liberation.
He appears regularly on a site called Asia Times, http://atimes.com/
along with other non-MSM pundits, most of whom really have it right - even when I don't agree.
check it out.
One thing I love about these webs is that what i put out i think is pretty good, but that what follows me is almost always better. Thank you for that.
Did Jim Lobe ever actually make a protest sign ? It has to be short and pithy, and you can't blather on about how *you* yourself understand all the nuances behind the 'slogan' like you can in an IPS article:
...but perhaps in a different sense than that meant by the "No Blood for Oil" slogan.
Yeah Jim, perhaps the slogan maker understands the importance of oil to an oil empire, perhaps they understand the impending Empire-shaking problem of Peak Oil, perhaps they understand the Mafioso technique of overwhelming violence to keep subordinate countries from challenging your authority, and perhaps they also understood the sub-plot of AIPAC supporters lending political and financial support, and being part of, the elite faction working to extend the Oil Empire another few decades. And still, the 'slogan' maker concluded all of that is not worth the 'blood', both American, and Iraqi, and the other Empire-provinces dragged into it (British, Salvadoran, etc...)
Yup, perhaps the person who came up with 'No Blood for Oil' had a deep, nuanced sense of what was at stake, yet could not put all of that insight onto a placard.
Or maybe he was an idiot, and thought the American Army was actually going to pump all the oil into waiting Exxon supertankers, and bring it back to New Orleans one busy summer.
A good protest sign gets the reader to wonder and think. It is not a treatise, and it does not mean the person carrying the sign has a comic-book, slogan filled mind.
Jeez.
If the answer to the question has to boil down to just one thing, I don't think the one thing is oil. How about the MIC and the well connected individuals and their contracts? How about the jobs they provide, so indispensible in these difficult times? What about a real-world testing ground for the military which needed so badly to be modernized? A free hand with the nation's purse strings (and line of credit)? To say it was only about the oil is to pretend that these things, and a whole whack more, didn't matter in making the decisions, when most people realize that they did. What one thing binds together the oil and all these other creepy things? I'd say, money. Money for their friends. Your money.
On the basis of why we had attacked Iraq (see my previous post), the "mission is indeed accomplished". Give Bush some credit, or how do you say, don't misunderestimate Bush....
I read an Einstein quote that said something like 'war is killing for profit'.
I'm sorry and sad, not only about Iraq, but even during the Clinton years when we used military force. We haven't learned to co-exist with each other, without violence, whether it's physical force, violent communication, or simply judging others, out of fear.
Is it too extreme to cancel cable, give away my TV, and read books from authors who study peace and harmony? The best thing I can do is live the most peaceful, positive life, and hope to influence one other person.
This might be the wrong message board for these types of comments, if so, apologies. However, on the 5th anniversary of the Iraq invasion, this might resonate with some people.
Jason
Human Being
Duh..., because
1) Israel wanted a potential Arab rival destroyed
2) Oil
3) fill the pockets of politician's (of both parties) real constituents - i.e. military-industrial complex (with money borrowed from you, me, our children and grand children)
4) Because Saddam wanted to kill "his Dad"
Any more questions?
It is good that Mr. Lobe cites the PNAC evidence, because that document really does bring together all the hubris, arrogance, exceptionalism, and cold-hearted cynical pragmatism that has fetched up such a resounding catastrophe in this life-story of the United States.
The repositioning of our military strengh into a strategic stronghold in that region was a first objective of the neocon coalition. That our position as the world's top alpha dog could change so swiftly and so negatively never occured to these geniuses.
Even allowing the claim that their intentions were noble and well-meaning - which I do not - it is a foregone conclusion to most reasonable people that invasion and occupation, continuing violence and destruction, mass dislocation and societal/community collapse are NOT precursers to a happy idyllic life as a quasi-democratic U.S. economic sattelite. And what sane people would want to take that yoke upon themselves, at any rate.
Yes, it's about the oil, the oil everywhere (check behind every door and under every table Hugo,) not just in the Persian Gulf, and about economic dominance and leverage, and a whacked-out demonic drive to turn the earth into an ugly self-consuming industrial cesspool.
Yes, the War is for Oil - and the Oil is for Israel --- Ever wonder where Israel gets its oil from?
It's a very simple question that provides a very simple answer to another one: Who Benefits from the Iraq war and every other conflict in the Middle East?
In fact, the following concise summary from Slate.com should make it perfectly clear to everyone that when Greenspan said that the war in Iraq is for oil, what he really admitted in an indirect way was that the war in fact is for Israel.
The leader of Hezbollah declared "open war" against Israel on Friday following the bombing of his offices in Beirut, Lebanon. The president of Iran has announced that if Israel were to expand the hostilities by attacking Syria, that would represent "an attack on the whole Islamic world and the regime will face a crushing response." Given the grim state of Arab-Israeli relations, where does Israel get its oil?
From Russia and former Soviet republics. Israel produces only a couple thousand barrels of oil a day, which means it relies on the global market for more than 99 percent of its consumption.
It's difficult to name all of the country's suppliers. In 2004, Israel's minister of national infrastructures admitted that "Israel's situation is complicated. We don't have diplomatic relations with most of the countries from which we import oil." But over the past 25 years, significant fuel imports have come from Angola, Colombia, Mexico, Egypt, and Norway. In more recent times, the Israelis have turned to Russia, Kazakhstan, and some of the other -stans for the bulk of their oil.
Israel has long sought a local source of oil, especially since the oil crisis of 1973. Having a nearby supplier would increase Israel's energy security and reduce the cost of its imports.
Iran filled that need for a while: Starting in 1968, the Israelis used a pipe called the "TIPline" to import Iranian oil from the Red Sea. But the shah was overthrown in 1979, and Iran shut off the tap. (These days, Israel lets the Russians use the TIPline to pump oil in the opposite direction.)
The Israelis gained access to another local source when they took control of Egyptian oil fields in Sinai after the Six-Day War.
Coincidence? I don't think so.
When Israel agreed to return the fields in 1979, they wanted broad assurances about their access to oil imports. The peace treaty with Egypt stipulated that "Israel shall be fully entitled to make bids for Egyptian-origin oil not needed for Egyptian domestic oil consumption." An accompanying document outlined a deal with the United States that ensured Israeli oil supplies in times of crisis.
Egypt continues to provide oil, but its importance as a supplier has diminished as Israel's appetite has grown. In 1995, Egyptian oil accounted for one-third of Israel's fuel imports; by 2000 that fraction had shrunk to one-eighth. While Israel was forced to look elsewhere for oil, it maintained a warm relationship with Egypt, at least regarding energy. In 2005, the two countries signed an agreement on the trade of natural gas.
Meanwhile, Israel continues to seek nearby suppliers. In the lead-up to the war in Iraq, there was some talk of restarting an abandoned pipeline that runs from Mosul, Iraq, to Haifa. In order for this to happen, Israel would need to somehow wrangle the support of the Syrians, since they control part of the route.
Are you seeing a pattern here???
They need oil, they take Sinai. They don't give it back until they've secure guaranteed access to its oil.
They need oil, they kick off a war between the US and Iraq to secure cheap oil from Mosul to Haifa. But, Syria and Lebanon stand in the way, so they decimate Lebanon and now they're after Syria.
And of course, they've been itching to re-open the pipeline from Iran since it shut down in '79. Hence, israel's incessant call for the US to attack Iran.
Finally, Israelis don't intend to end their quest for oil with Iran. They have other countries in their cross-hairs, like Saudi Arabia and their so-called "grand prize" - Egypt.
The Israelis have also tried to ramp up their own fuel production. A few weeks ago, they got some press for developing a new way to extract energy from the country's large reserves of "oil shale."
Why bother with peaceful innovative ways to produce energy when War is so much more effective?
Especially when they have US paying the price, with both our money and our lives.
In fact, Israel's insatiable quest for oil and gas can even explain its relentless assault against Hamas in Gaza.
So, the next time someone tells you that the war in Iraq is for oil, you tell them - ABSOLUTELY! - and the oil, in turn, is for Israel.
--- http://www.wakeupfromyourslumber.com/node/3696
Bob-1 said:
"The best theory I have heard as to the real reason for the invasion is to give the following message to the oil producing nations of the world by making an example of Iraq: "You will accept payment for your oil in US dollars only. You will not sell oil for Euros, Yen, Roubles or anything else (as Saddam was doing) OR we will trash your entire country." The rationale being that if the dollar ceased to be THE currency for trading oil it would lose half its value & crash the US economy."
To read an excellent discussion of this idea go to a seven part series by Edwin Vieira, Jr. The first part, containing links to subsequent parts, is at:
http://www.newswithviews.com/Vieira/edwin21.htm
The series started January 11, 2006.
The first two paragraphs:
"No careful student of history can fail to be impressed by the interconnectedness of ideas and events in every civilization's rise and fall--especially that bad ideas inevitably engender worse consequences. That may soon become painfully apparent once again. Foremost among the bad ideas that should come to the mind of every patriot are the unconstitutional and dishonest monetary and banking systems that today beset the United States, as well as the entire Western world, in the form of the Federal Reserve System and other central banks that emit legal-tender fiat currency and "monetize" public and private debt. The worse consequences that few people foresee are the destruction of these systems--and the ensuing economic, political, and social chaos that will engulf America and all other Western countries--if any one of a number of quite predictable events occurs.
"This Commentary addresses the possibility that Muslims throughout the world will turn from fiat currency and electronic bank credit to gold dinar and silver dirham coins as their media of exchange, thereby employing the full force of economics in a decisive counterattack in the global war that the West's Establishment has so imprudently launched against "Islamic fundamentalism". And leading to fulfillment of the prophecy in the Musnad of Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal that '[a] time is certainly coming over mankind when nothing will be of use except a dinar and a dirham.'"
The wars, the occupations, the propaganda, the destabilizations, all paid for with our tax $ and the blood and lives of some of us is all done in in the service of the US/transnational corporate empire; in a word, promoted by soulless bastards to make $ (billions of it).
We must continue to simultaneously walk and chew gum, fight the ocupations and myriads of others, in any way we can imagine, and, at the same time fight for Obama.
Be heartened by what's been accomplished; without the movement, forget about the Kucinich, and now, Obama, candidacies, and consider that we have thus far stopped bombs on people living in Iran.
Listening to Obama's great speech yesterday I was inspired, and yes, made more hopeful; but I also was reminded that however great, that it was restricted by the brainwash that corporate media and what I call the brownshirt media (Limbaugh, Hannity, O'Reilly, Beck (that towering intellectual, moral force),etc.)
I obsess w/corporate media because I realize that the space allowed to "viable" politicians is very limited. To speak the truth about Israel/Palestine, Venezuela/Colombia,etc. is to commit political suicide.
In Nov. 2002, in Cortland, NY, 62 of us of marched & rallied. A car w/college age students drove by and a guy derisively yelled, "We're gonna get those bastards!" Until that point I was unaware that people believed that Saddam Hussein had something to do with 9/11. I had been getting news from sources like CD, Democracy Now, ZNet, Counterpunch, TomPaine.com, Truthout, etc. Without these sites the space would be even more restricted.
February 15, in Cortland, 72 people marched in 4 degree weather, joining 10 million people world-wide (wh/i followed on indymedia--another great site). On March 20, my son, on his way to being an exchange student in the netherlands, and after being soaked in the rain, seen luna in NYC, and sleeping in london airport, landed in brussels. he saw it as such a beautiful city that he couldn't believe people actually lived there. Then, he came upon people with flags and banners, and, of course joined them, as he despised "our" foreign policy. Following his emails and the indymedia reports, i found they were nearly identical: 25000 marchers, 10,000 boxed off and cornered as they started to hit the US embassy w/balloons filled w/red paint. he was in that group, wisely escaped.
So, almost all of those 10million people are still alive, and w/us. And, listen to Air America and Keith Olberman. And, advertise all of the web sites I've mentioned, as widely as you can. The beautiful people who post here are vital to the future of us all.
So, we have all helped keep the space from narrowing even more. Kucinich and Nader can never become president of the United States of America, but they have expanded the space. The rest of the job is ours!
Possible a secondary to pacify some Americans but not first.
Can you acronym "Operation Iraqi Liberation" the first name of the invasion (quickly changed)?
After all, oil is an absolutely indispensable requirement for running modern economies and militaries
Jim Lobe is doing us a great disservice by calling this economy "modern". It's not modern at all, it's medieval, run by and for the church of domination capitalism. A properly organized society consumes one tenth the energy and this volume is very easily covered by solar-thermal, wind, biofuels, and a few miscellaneous renewable energy sources, with no fossil fuels needed at all. Stop feeding the monster, Jim Lobe.
We do not need evidence that Big Oil drove the conquest of Iraq. The capitalist/imperialist machine works very well on winks and nods and even without any signals at all. Progressives ought to take a cue from this: The capitalists all benefit when individual capitalists act in the general interest of capitalism.
I think Mr. Lobe and most of the posters have it right. The war was a gamble that we could secure a strategic presence in the middle east on the cheap. The goals were to have American troops "protecting" Iraqi oil (for us) guaranteeing supply and even price, a friendly (puppet) government, and a military presence closer to Israel.
Bad gamble by a really bad President. What we had to lose was so much more than the possible gains. The odds were slim at best, and the whole thing was immoral and illegal.
Next question: We broke it. Do we stay and try to fix it, as many in the military want to do, or do we step aside and let the civil war, balkanization, inteference by Iran, Turkey, Syria, al Quaeda, Russia... take its course? We need a new President and Congress, hopefully with some character, to decide that.
". . . because no one who ever served at top levels in the administration has ever been able to say precisely when (let alone why) the decision was made to invade Iraq,. . ."
Actually, there is one person: Paul O'Neill, Bush's first Treasury secretary. O'Neill was a member of the National Security Council, and was at the first two NSC meetings, and tells about the decision in a rare leak from the Bush White House.
The decision was made on February 1, 2001, fully seven months before 9/11. According to O'Neill the main reason stated was as a "demonstration model" of U.S. military might - thus dovetailing with the neoconservative strategy that Lobe presents. All they needed was an excuse to invade Iraq. The meeting ended with Bush saying, "Fine. Go find me a way to do this."
You can read the details in "The Price of Loyalty" by Ron Suskind, pages 70-86.
And then you can start calling for Bush/Cheney impeachment.
"Clearly, the Times by now is in decline, with goals lower than that."
The Times' goals have never changed; since its inception, it's served the Borg--American fascism.
Everything that Dubyuh said today about Iraq is a lie. In spite of this, the talking heads of the MSM accept it without a single mention of how obvious these lies are. They are complicit in these war crimes and should be held accountable as well. The war was waged and occupation continues in order for the personal profits of Dubyuh and Cheney's cronies. It's all about Dubyuh's personal bank accounts and the ego of a little man with a serious inferiority complex. "I do has a bigger dick than my Daddy- I do! I do!"
America as the world's most dangerous terrorist state is the Dubyuh legacy.
Hats off to the author. He touched on a point that is shunned by the mass majority....ISRAEL. That is probably the #1 reason for Bush's action. Heck, the USA could have purchased all the oil in the U.A.E., Qatar, Sadia Arabia, Kuwait, and Iraq, for the money that has been spent on murder and destruction in Iraq alone.
Because it can. Which reminds me, why did China invade peaceful Tibet years ago, and why didn't the U.S., the U.K., and the U.N. help Tibet when they were requested to?
Interestingly, Barack Obama is the only candidate who has mentioned anything about human rights violations against Tibetans.
God bless Barack Obama!
Seymour Hersh pointed out that his old paper, The New York Times, completely blew this story, "the biggest moral story of our age."
Additionally, covering "Winter Soldier," the carefully fact-checked stories of the American Military's own atrocities-- both as performed and witnessed-- would be exactly the same, Hersh indicated, as his expose of the My Lai massacre.
That, as we know, was Pulitzer Prize journalism. Clearly, the Times by now is in decline, with goals lower than that.
Heee's Baaack!
It was because Osama bin Laden was in Afganastan.
So, the conclusion of this article is that there were two possible reasons for the war on Iraq:
1. The "Demonstration War." As suggested by Noam Chomsky, among others, the idea was to demonstrate the overwhelming power of the US military by kicking some virtually defenseless little country. Examples of this would be Grenada and Panama, except in this case the oil resources would mean that victim would not be an inconsequential prize. Iraq's location in the Middle East would be a significant escalation from our usual Latin American demonstration wars. It would be a object lesson to Iran, Syria, Egypt, and Saudia Arabia of US power and our willingness to use it.
This goal has been a complete failure, as the internal resistance to the occupation has completely tied up essentially our entire army for the the next decade or more. Our military, at least, realizes that the Iraq occupation also rules out any air attack on Iran since our troops in Iraq are hostages to the Shiite militias who, if they were fully committed to the anti-occupation struggle, could cut the 300km supply line from Bagdad to the ports in Kuwait and make the evaculation of Saigon look like a picnic. "Great powers do not have small wars," the Duke of Wellington said about Napoleon in Spain, and the panic that we are seeing among the administration and its allies to keep the occupation going is a reflection of that dilemma: we're in a struggle we can't win and can't let go without demonstrating our powerlessness rather than our power.
2. The "Israel Connection": for at least a group of neo-conservatives centered around the PNAC, the goal was to remove a significant adversary of Israel and a source of support for Palestinian resistance to clear the path for the integration of a significant fraction of the West Bank into "greater Israel." In this, the Iraq war has been entirely successful. Iraq has been destroyed as a country, broken up into three warring groups, and it will not recover its previous regional influence in the foreseeable future.
An air war against Iran would be the logical next step in taking down regional adversaries of Israel. The continued drum beat for an attack on Iran could have no purpose that I can see except to remove the last major counter-weight to Israeli power in the Middle East. Any "demonstration effect" of US power created by an attack on Iran could be completely overwhelmed by the disasterous consequences for our troops in Iraq, as Admiral Fallon and others in the military are fully aware. If such an attack takes place, it would create serious questions about whether the US is using Israel as an agent of US foreign policy or visa versa.
No, it was none of the above. bush went to war, like thousands of megalomanics before him, to distract the American People from really investigating the horrible performance of his administration before 9/11 and to distract the American People from his subsequent rape of America.
There is nothing like a good war against a "bad" guy" to distract the people from paying any attention to internal affairs.
Even now, all he has to do is run down the hall yelling "they're planning to attack us" and the American People cower in the corner and forget any other problem It's a shame; but its human nature.
keith in Denver
IT'S THE OIL, STUPID!
Any other argument is just a lie.
Cogent reasoning, Mr. Lobe, and in agreement, I believe, with Professor Noam Chomsky's analysis: with US economic power in decline over the last 35+ years, military power is the dimension in which the US reigns supreme. But military power and the willingness to use it must be demonstrated to the world from time to time, if a "credible" threat of US military power is to be maintained. That is, the US can obtain compliance with its dictates around the world by demonstrating every so often that it can and will attack any country of its choosing. The oil-rich Middle East is a particularly important region in which this lesson needed to be demonstrated. This is called "credibility" of military threat in official parlance.
The neocons' policy is more extreme principally because it is more delusional in its understanding of facts on the ground. So real-politicniks stop after taking Kuwait because they don't want to get into the mess. Neocons, on the other hand, actually believe the US is a beacon of hope and freedom and will be welcomed with flower petals by the Iraqi population. It might be a generational thing: the neo-cons believe the lies and propaganda they were taught in HS about US history so they live in a more delusional system.
It is too simplistic and unhelpful to understanding to dismiss these people simply as evil or stupid. Too many lives depend on it. It is important to study in detail the reasons for their behavior.
It's nauseating that Bush can continue to spew the same dishonest reasons for invading Iraq that he's been spewing for the last 5+ years.
He's a war criminal, as are others in his administration. The problem is that the majority of the US ruling class apparently believe that the US has the right to invade, bomb, and torture at will to achieve its aims. For them, the problem isn't the criminality of Bush's actions, it's that he bungled the job.
I agree one hundred percent with metal dog. I find it curious that Cheney changed his mind about going back into politics (becoming VP after he was just asked to FIND one) after he cost Halliburton so much money getting them to acquire Drescher Industries. I think Halliburton took him aside and said 'You owe us...find a way to get us the money we lost ...'. To me it is always about money and of all the companies that are making money with ongoing contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan, Cheney was certainly closest to Halliburton.
This document seems to be the blueprint BushCo's been folowing:
A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm
http://www.iasps.org/strat1.htm
The best theory I have heard as to the real reason for the invasion is to give the following message to the oil producing nations of the world by making an example of Iraq: "You will accept payment for your oil in US dollars only. You will not sell oil for Euros, Yen, Roubles or anything else (as Saddam was doing) OR we will trash your entire country." The rationale being that if the dollar ceased to be THE currency for trading oil it would lose half its value & crash the US economy.
One major motivation for the war was entirely left out of this piece. When you ignore how much money has been transferred from the public trust into private hands (Blackwater, Halliburton, KBR, Lockheed, etc), it's difficult to fully grasp the full motivation and depravity of the endeavor. The defense industry, along with the Pentagon, was having serious trouble adjusting to a post-Cold War defense infrastructure, preferring instead to pursue more of the same. If your only target is a couple thousand lightly-armed guys hiding in caves, it's hard to justify a defense budget larger than that of the rest of the world put together.
It was that same vision that formed the inspiration for the 27 charter signatories — a coalition of aggressive nationalists, neo-conservatives, and Christian Right leaders that included Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Libby, Khalilzad, and several other future senior Bush administration national-security officials — of the Project for the New American Century (PNAC) in 1997.
Recall that the PNAC document stated that their project was predicated on a "New Pearl Harbor"...which luckily for them happened on Sept 11, 2001...
Does anyone really beleive that an administration that would coldly murder over a million Iraqis, and send 4000 of its own soldiers to their doom without proper equipment and planning, and boldly lie abouts is reasons, would hesitate for a second to murder 3000 of its own people in order to move its plan forward?
Wake up fools.
Pretty simple, actually...
2003 was not an Olympic year, so Bush had nothing to boycott (think 1980).
Hm, no mention of Iraq getting all set up to sell oil in currencies other than U$... Hence no mention of Iran gearing up to do the same... I find it difficult to get to the bottom of this painful issue without even mentioning the elephant in the room - that US world dominance is utterly dependant on their ability to issue currency with reckless abandon. Once it stops being the de-facto stuff of the bulk of all transactions worldwide, the "supply overhang" that has built up over the last 35 years is gonna come (is coming?) crashing down, and the US will have to return to good old fashioned production. No more getting rich just by fostering innovative monetary vehicles. Do you doubt this? I'd strongly advise that you open your eyes.
Fire all the liars! If they cannot speak the truth, then thay cannot have an alliance with the Christian Right, can they?
They also contributed to drive the price of oil up...