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Surprise, Surprise! Iraq War Was About Oil
Afghanistan may be the graveyard of empires, but Iraq is home to a graveyard sense of humor. Iraqis wonder aloud whether the U.S. and Britain would have invaded Iraq if its main export had been cabbages instead of oil.
However obvious the answer, a remarkable array of American pundits and pseudo-savants have resisted giving the oil factor any pride of place among the motives behind the U.S./U.K. decision to invade Iraq in 2003. To this day, the Fawning Corporate Media (FCM) continue to play the accustomed role as government accomplice suppressing unwelcome news.
So, if you don’t tune in to Amy Goodman’s Democracy Now or read the British press, you will have missed the latest documentary evidence showing that Great Britain’s Lords and Ladies lied about how big oil companies, like BP, lusted after Iraqi oil in the months leading up to the attack on Iraq.
Oil researcher Greg Muttitt’s new book Fuel on Fire: Oil and Politics in Occupied Iraq presents that evidence, since Muttitt had better luck than American counterparts in getting responses to his Freedom of Information requests.
After a five-year struggle, he obtained more than 1,000 official documents which — how to say this — do not reflect well on the peerage, the captains of the oil industry, and the government of Tony Blair.
On April 19, the British Independent published a major story about these disclosures, which America’s FCM have avoided like the plague.
Quoting the released British documents, the Independent showed BP salivating over an expected windfall of Iraqi oil, with the saliva politely sponged up by Foreign Office functionaries. From the Independent:
“The Foreign Office invited BP in on 6 November 2002 to talk about opportunities in Iraq ‘post regime change.’ Its minutes state: ‘Iraq is the big oil prospect. BP is desperate to get in there.’ …
“Whereas BP was insisting in public that it had ‘no strategic interest’ in Iraq, in private it told the Foreign Office that Iraq was ‘more important than anything we’ve seen for a long time’ … it [BP] was willing to take ‘big risks’ to get a share of the Iraqi reserves, the second largest in the world.”
Of course, BP was singing a different tune for the average folks. Lord Browne, then-BP chief executive, insisted on March 12, 2003, a week before the invasion of Iraq: “It is not, in my or BP’s opinion, a war about oil.”
The official documents, however, offer a contradictory account. Gosh, would BP officials lie?
The minutes of a similar meeting with BP and Shell on Oct. 31, 2002, reinforce the point. They show then-British Trade Minister, Lady Symons, agreeing that British oil companies must not lose out in competing for Iraqi oil, particularly “if the U.K. had itself been a conspicuous supporter of the U.S. government throughout the crisis.”
Prime Minister Tony Blair was equally disingenuous in his public remarks. On April 19, Democracy Now ran a brief clip in which British author Muttitt called to mind Blair’s assurances to a TV audience on Feb. 6, 2003, six weeks before the war: “The idea that we’re interested in Iraq’s oil is absurd, it’s one of the most absurd conspiracy theories you can imagine.”
Muttitt pointed out that, as Blair was saying this, a secret (until now) Foreign Office document setting out British strategy toward Iraqi oil asserted, “Britain has an absolutely vital interest in Iraq’s oil.”
The London Mail Online on April 20 summed up the contradictions with classic English understatement. It noted that the flurry of meetings between oil executives and the Labour government in late 2002 “appear to be at odds with their insistence Iraq’s vast oil reserves were not a consideration ahead of the March 2003 invasion.”
Back in Washington
America’s FCM have yet to acknowledge this latest embarrassment of how fully its prominent members were wrong about this oil issue as they queued up behind the Bush/Blair invasion in 2002-2003. Top pundits echoed Blair’s dismissal of the oil motive as a “conspiracy theory.”
Instead the FCM agreed that the “preemptive war” was needed to protect Americans from Iraq’s WMD and stop Saddam Hussein’s collaboration with Osama bin Laden – even if there were no WMD stockpiles and there was no collaboration.
The war’s defenders also sprinkled in some noble sentiments about advancing human rights and spreading democracy. If the “no blood for oil” argument was mentioned, it was put on a tee so it could be easily swatted away by the Bush administration.
For instance, on Dec. 15, 2002, “60 Minutes” correspondent Steve Croft asked then Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, “What do you say to people who think this [the coming invasion of Iraq] is about oil?” Rumsfeld replied:
“Nonsense. It just isn’t. There — there — are certain … things like that, myths that are floating around. I’m glad you asked it. I — it has nothing to do with oil, literally nothing to do with oil.”
Gee, what kind of person would suggest that President George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney might take the country to war with so much as a thought in their heads about locking down control of Iraq’s vast oil reserves?
Cheney, of course, understood the geopolitical importance of oil before he joined Bush in running for the White House. As CEO of Halliburton in autumn 1999, Cheney had observed that:
“Oil companies are expected to keep developing enough oil to offset oil depletion and also to meet new demand. So where is the oil going to come from?
“Governments and the national oil companies are obviously in control of 90 percent of the assets. Oil remains fundamentally a government business. The Middle East, with two-thirds of the world’s oil and the lowest cost, is still where the prize ultimately lies.”
Since the Iraq invasion, several Washington insiders have blurted out the suppressed Realpolitik about the strategic value of oil.
As early as May 2003 (in the heady days of “Mission Accomplished”), then Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz nonchalantly responded to a question about why Bush attacked Iraq, but not North Korea, by noting that Iraq “floats on a sea of oil.”
At that early stage, Wolfowitz apparently still thought the Iraq war would be the “cakewalk” predicted by his neoconservative colleague Kenneth Adelman. With the war supposedly won – and with Americans famously tolerant of the behavior of winners – Wolfowitz might have thought some candor wouldn’t raise many eyebrows.
At that point, the Bush team still harbored hope that convicted felon/conman extraordinaire Ahmed Chalabi could be put in power in Baghdad, open the door to Western oil companies, and — not incidentally — recognize Israel.
Wolfowitz, Adelman, and the neoconservative crowd would have been wiser to temper their hubris with a smidgeon of common sense. The notion that Chalabi had, or could garner, a significant following in Iraq was a pipe dream.
The State Department conducted a poll of Iraqis in 2003, finding Chalabi to be the only listed political leader whose unfavorable ratings exceeded his favorable ones. And small wonder. Chalabi and his wealthy family had left Iraq in 1956.
(As a benchmark for those who might remember, 1956 was two years before the New York Giants baseball team broke my heart by leaving the Polo Grounds and moving to San Francisco.)
Despite Chalabi’s lack of Iraqi roots, the neoconservative movers and shakers in Washington and Baghdad still helped get him appointed in 2005 as Deputy Prime Minister and Chair of the Iraq Energy Council, which directed Iraqi oil policy. Chalabi was also in and out as acting Oil Minister.
Insiders Reveal Oil Role
Bush’s first Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill, who was fired in late 2002 after disagreeing with Bush on tax cuts and Iraq, was one of the first insiders to detail the administration’s Iraqi oil obsession, tracing it back to the days after Bush’s inauguration as Bush’s advisers planned how to divvy up Iraq’s oil wealth.
O’Neill told author Ron Suskind for his 2004 book, The Price of Loyalty, that Bush’s first National Security Council meeting just days into his presidency included a discussion of invading Iraq. O’Neill said even at that early date, the message from Bush was “find a way to do this.”
Subsequent disclosures have corroborated O’Neill’s account about the importance of oil in Bush’s calculation. Though Freedom of Information requests in the United States have been nowhere near as successful as those in London, one did hit pay dirt.
A FOIA lawsuit forced the Commerce Department to fork over some documents of Cheney’s Energy Task Force documents from March 2001, including a map of Iraqi oilfield, pipelines, refineries, terminals, and potential areas for exploration. There also was a Pentagon chart titled “Foreign Suitors for Iraqi Oilfield Contracts,” and one chart detailing Iraqi oil and gas projects.
Al Qaeda’s Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks gave Bush and Cheney the political opening they needed to turn their designs on Iraqi oil into reality. And the two also began linking Saddam Hussein and his fictional stockpiles of WMD to al Qaeda.
Suskind wrote, “Documents were being prepared by the Defense Intelligence Agency, Rumsfeld’s intelligence arm, mapping Iraq’s oil fields and exploration areas and listing companies that might be interested in leveraging the precious asset.”
“The desire to ‘dissuade’ countries from engaging in ‘asymmetrical challenges’ to the United States … matched with plans for how the world’s second largest oil reserve might be divided among the world’s contractors made for an irresistible combination, O’Neill later said,” according to Suskind.
One oil executive confided to a New York Times reporter a month before the war on Iraq, “For any oil company, being in Iraq is like being a kid in F.A.O. Schwarz.”
As the years wore on and the Bush administration struggled to control the violent resistance to the U.S. occupation of Iraq, other prominent Americans began acknowledging the obvious importance of oil in the U.S. calculation for war.
Former Chairman of the Federal Reserve Alan Greenspan in his 2007 book The Age of Turbulence wrote: “I am saddened that it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge what everyone knows: the Iraq war is largely about oil.”
In a talk at Stanford on Oct. 13, 2007, former CENTCOM commander Gen. John Abizaid seconded Greenspan. “Of course it [Iraq] is all about oil,” Abizaid said.
Not Exclusively Oil
But the motivation to attack Iraq was not solely oil. Nor was it solely to acquire permanent or “enduring” military bases. Nor was it only to make the Middle East safer for Israel.
In my view it was an amalgam of ALL OF THE ABOVE plus a few others like vengeance and what the Chinese used to call “great-power chauvinism.” I am always surprised at those who take the position that just one of these motives was operative and insist on excluding others. Neither life, nor policy making, is that simple.
A few months after the war started, I coined the “acronym” OIL to address U.S./U.K. motives. I must put the term “acronym” in quotation marks, because Jon Stewart has rightly accused me of “violating the rules for acronyms” because O was for oil; I for Israel; and L for logistics (the military bases), Stewart insisted that OIL could not be the acronym if the “O” was one of the elements. It was a good spoof, meeting my desire to call primary attention to OIL. I still think the “acronym” performs a useful function as mnemonic.
Hopefully, we have already taken care of the oil motive in what is said above. How about Israel? Well, candor requires acknowledgment that the neoconservatives running Bush/Cheney policies had great difficulty distinguishing between the strategic interests of Israel on the one hand, and those of the U.S. on the other.
While this was clear from the outset of the Bush administration, specific evidence emerged in London at the Chilcot hearings on Iraq in January 2010.
Former Prime Minister Tony Blair spoke publicly about Israel’s input into the all-important Bush-Blair deliberations on Iraq in Crawford, Texas, in April 2002. Inexplicably, Blair slipped up on his propensity for hiding important facts from the public and told some truth, though his indiscretion got little attention in America’s FCM. Blair said:
“As I recall that [April 2002] discussion, it was less to do with specifics about what we were going to do on Iraq or, indeed, the Middle East, because the Israel issue was a big, big issue at the time. I think, in fact, I remember, actually, there may have been conversations that we had even with Israelis, the two of us [Bush and Blair], whilst we were there. So that was a major part of all this.”
Blair’s remarks reinforced earlier ones by Philip Zelikow, a former member of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, executive director of the 9/11 Commission, and later counselor to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
Zelikow told an audience at the University of Virginia in September 2002 that the “real threat” from Iraq was not to the United States. Rather, the "unstated threat" from Iraq was the "threat against Israel.” He added, "The American government doesn't want to lean too hard on it rhetorically, because it is not a popular sell."
‘Enduring’ Military Bases
Then there are the “enduring” military bases, which used to be called “permanent” bases. Today, Defense Secretary Robert Gates is engaging in not-so-subtle pleading with the Iraqi government to permit some American forces to remain at some large bases beyond the agreed end-of-2011 withdrawal date.
(Tom Engelhardt has an excellent commentary on these “enduring” bases in the introduction to an essay by Noam Chomsky at TomDispatch.com.)
To refresh memories of the Bush/Cheney approach to the base and oil issues, it might be helpful to recall one of President Bush’s more significant “signing statements.” In early 2008, Bush wrote that he did not feel bound by the Defense Authorization Act’s following specific prohibitions:
“To establish any military installation or base for the purpose of providing permanent stationing of United States Armed Forces in Iraq, “ or
“To exercise United States control of the oil resources of Iraq.”
I was reminded of Bush’s signing statement as I watched Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Feb. 18 wordsmith a similar Obama administration approach to Afghanistan. Clinton said:
“In no way should our enduring commitment be misunderstood as a desire by America or our allies to occupy Afghanistan against the will of its people … we do not seek any permanent American military bases in their country.”
But who are we to believe? Just ten days before (on Feb. 8) Afghan President Hamid Karzai openly confirmed that the Obama administration has been in secret talks with him to formalize a system of permanent (or maybe “enduring”?) military bases in Afghanistan.
The Bush signing statement about bases and oil now seems emblematic, inasmuch as it points to the reasoning so many Americans have come to tolerate — and even endorse; that is, the concept that the first resource wars of the 21st Century were simply necessary to emplace military bases to ensure that U.S. gas stations don’t run dry.
After all, many of us already are paying more than $4 a gallon at the pump.
One can understand, without condoning it, that many Americans have become comfortable with the notion that we are somehow exceptional, and thus entitled to more than our proportionate share of the world’s natural resources.
The FCM are a very huge help in persuading Americans that it is okay to ignore the suffering and devastation inflicted abroad, because we have to protect our “way of life” from those who are just plain “jealous.”
Over the past decade, this mode of thinking has found expression in several interesting ways. Three examples that come to mind:
--“I don’t care what the international lawyers say, we’re going to kick some ass!” (Bush in the White House bunker, evening of 9/11);
--“Kick Their Ass & Take Their Gas!” (prominent placard held by Crawford Texans counter-demonstrating against supporters of Cindy Sheehan, August 2005);
--“We go to war for oil. It’s a good reason to go to war.” (Ann Coulter, speech at Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Washington, DC, April 21, 2011).
And so it goes.
An earlier version of this article appeared on Consortiumnews.com.




115 Comments so far
Show AllOur addiction to oil (and other fossil fuels) is not only killing people in the Middle East, Central Asia, and Africa, as well as U.S. and NATO soldiers and contractors sent to steal it, but the very planet itself.
Catastrophic climate chaos due to our fossil fuel addiction has already killed tens of thousands over the last ten years in weird weather events, and we ain't seen nothin' yet compared to the next hundred years.
We have effectively doomed the lives of our children and their children, as well as that of countless other species.
USA ans are not, let me repeat are not addicted to oil or gas.
They are addicted to their vehicles, and would be perfectly happy to drive them powered by any comparable ( cost & quality) means made available.
The corporations have limited the choice to gasoline.
It would be less expensive to give each USAan family a hybrid or electric car than fight these wars.
The good news is Los Alamos labs has just announced the perfecting of a carbon, iron, colbalt alloy replacement for the expensive platinum formerly neccessary for Hydrogen Fuel Cells.
You're the one coming out of the woodwork, fool.
McG has repeatedly denounced Israeli influence on US policy. And he has called for an independent investigation into 9-11.
You can find this out in 20 seconds on this fancy tool called the internet, maybe you've heard of it.
Crawl back into your termite hole.
You want to explain why you're such an ass? McGovern writes hundreds of articles. Maybe you could start by reading him. Then we can talk.
Keep digging, you're sure to get to the bottom of your hole sometime. That's how you get out of a hole, right? You keep digging!
Have a great night.
OK. Here's your "logic":
"the logic seems to be pretty solid: if america is to protect israel, america must have access to enough oil to keep the economy running, because the economy supports the military that protects israel."
Brilliant! So if Israel did not exist and hold sway over the US, the US would have NO INTEREST in global domination, controlling energy resources, or "to keep the economy running."
Keep digging, my newest friend.
McGovern stated THREE primary factors leading up to war with Iraq, OIL AND ISRAEL were two of them. Your post reads like psy-ops trying to make it only and exclusively about Israel. That is a lie, and a way to foment anti-semitism.
GLENN: Your comment about autos was very astute, and something I've been thinking about for a long time. I don't drive everyday and I try to put errands together so that they're all dispensed with on one trip. Still, the guilt for driving at all, knowing about all the dying dolphins washing up in the Gulf is considerable.
We are an OCCUPIED land. The occupiers have found ways to blend in and pretend to be "one" of us. In this way, always the enemy is conceived of "outside," and thus remedies for ideally taking back the reins to an at least semi-responsive, representative government are not pursued (by most).
McGovern writes critically about US involvement about Israel on a regular basis. No one can write about every facet of everything in every piece.
"USA ans are not, let me repeat are not addicted to oil or gas.
"They are addicted to their vehicles, and would be perfectly happy to drive them powered by any comparable ( cost & quality) means made available."
Glenn, c'mon man, look around you. Tell me one thing that you can see that was not extracted, designed, manufactured, transported, and installed without oil. One thing. Even your own body is here because oil facilitated its birth (hospital, doctor, midwife, supplies, medications, instruments, lights, heating, water, blankets, basinet, etc.).
We are awash in oil. Oil makes all this possible, including vehicles. They can invent any kind of green energy system for vehicles but those vehicles (bodies, frames, tires, components, and the fuel systems) will come about because of oil.
It's really a Zen thing: We are here because everything else has come before. If we really want to decrease our dependence on oil (and thus, our dependence on war for oil), we need to meditate on how we live our lives.
Oil has only been extensively used for 100 years, plus there are many alternatives to oil in energy and materials, plastics were originally plant material.
Was there not life before oil? Will there be life after oil, only if we realize it is not necessary.
Every product produced in the pre oil past is still being produced today( NPR did a challenge and a researcher was able to procure any implement that anyone could recall).
I am not claiming USA production is not oil based, I am stating that most USAans could care less how their products are produced only that they possess their products.
They are addicted to their possessions not oil.
The corporations have chosen oil not the people.
Of course mediate and meditate on how you live your life including a life beyond oil.
If all our products could be produced and shipped without the use of extracted oil, we would still be in a world of hurt. Where do we get such a product, what do we have to consume or grow to produce it, and where would all the waste go, when our landfills and oceans are already teeming with our refuse?
You seem to be looking at the end products of oil, I am seeing how they all came about. Either way, the process and the products are not sustainable.
I am looking forward to a life beyond oil. I am not looking forward to the transition.
Ted your thinking in a locked box, I am not saying everything will be exactly the same without oil, I am saying a great spiritual, healthy and technologically advanced life is possible without poisons in material energy or thoughts.
I am rejecting all the harmful ways of supporting society and looking to an enlightened society not shackled by insecurity, ignorance, habit or lack of vision.
Only affirming the possibility creates the reality. I said that.
One simple, basic,extremely universal and vital example Organic Farming rejects all oil and is far superior to farming with oil products.
There's no technological impediment to transitioning to 90% renewable energy use; and materials can be replaced on an ad hoc basis, many plastics being replaced by earth or plant material.
And again an argument for renewables never in no way implies an argument against
moderation in consumption.
And we have yet to publicaly learn if any of Tesla's energy projects were viable.
And Corporations bury alot of technology in unused patents.
We are struggling against the chains corporate greed, do not add the chain of lack of imagination.
"One simple, basic,extremely universal and vital example Organic Farming rejects all oil and is far superior to farming with oil products."
Not to split hairs again, but this is not so. I know of several organic farmers who use tractors. The good thing is that organic farms are generally small, so they can transition to horse and owen if/when necessary.
Permaculture, on the other hand, eschews oil products, though, it is not dogmatic in its stance. We all need to get to where we are going somehow, and for now, oil is necessary. The question is whether oil will be affordable given peak oil.
"There's no technological impediment to transitioning to 90% renewable energy use..."
Again, you have to get somewhere given the current oil based technology. It will take a lot of oil doing that (and it should be done now!) against a mountain of denial and political stupidity. It's doable, but do we have the wit and the will?
"And again an argument for renewables never in no way implies an argument against
moderation in consumption."
Agreed, and I never meant to imply that it was.
"We are struggling against the chains corporate greed, do not add the chain of lack of imagination."
A low blow, man. You had to climb into a hole for that one.
Highly refined oil products like "Superior Oil "dormant oil spray,and "Ultra-fine light superior dormant oil spray" have been a mainstay of organic gardeners for 50 years.Today modern farmers can use highly refined vegetable based oils to smother pest eggs and fungal spores based on Neem oils,Soy Bean Oils etc.The Neem Oils contain Aziradactin (sp?)a fungicide and I.G.R. insect growth regulator as an added benefit.
No Ted I disagree Dormant and Superior All season oils are very much in use in Organic gardening today .Some state Organic certification programs may frown on dormant and ultrafine all season oil sprays but as an I.P.M. organic practitioner I think they are valuable ,least toxic tools.Peas in, Johnathan Aluishious Hempseed lll
?
I don't understand how this relates to what I said, but peas out, man.
I think he's meaning to say about how organic oils reduce the dependency on pesticides and thereby foreign oil. It's not much compared to our gasoline and diesel engine powered vehicles but it can all add up.
"Ted your thinking in a locked box..."
Locked box? Possibly. If so, I guess I need a little oil applied to my own rusty lock (pun intended).
Really, it seems we're talking past each other, and I apologize for my part in it.
I do believe we can have a world based on sustainable technology. What I have been trying to say (poorly, apparently), is that we will not have sustainable technology until we have the wisdom to want to live sustainably. It does seem we are coming at it from slightly different angles, but the fact that we are both there is what is important.
And yes, our addiction to consumerism is the fire in the problem. My point is that oil is the fuel.
My apologies if I split any hairs.
Thank you, Glenn. You're a poster who can be counted on to think in a fiercely independent manner. Your capacity to look outside of the box, and disentangle yourself from all the MSM-designed-fictions of our era is refreshing.
If we are truly "addicted" to oil, there's a simple cure or treatment. Even if simply a mere "dependence" on foreign oil. It's called "rationing". If it's in the interest of this nation to minimize the need for foreign petroleum the easiest means of doing that would have been to "ration" our domestic supplies with an aim towards total abstinence from those foreign markets. But apparently that has never been our goal.
Jimmy Carter delivered this televised speech on April 18, 1977.
"Tonight I want to have an unpleasant talk with you about a problem unprecedented in our history. With the exception of preventing war, this is the greatest challenge our country will face during our lifetimes. The energy crisis has not yet overwhelmed us, but it will if we do not act quickly.
It is a problem we will not solve in the next few years, and it is likely to get progressively worse through the rest of this century.
We must not be selfish or timid if we hope to have a decent world for our children and grandchildren.
We simply must balance our demand for energy with our rapidly shrinking resources. By acting now, we can control our future instead of letting the future control us.
This difficult effort will be the "moral equivalent of war" -- except that we will be uniting our efforts to build and not destroy."
Reagan was elected, insured that the party for the ruling-elite Empire continued (and got even more class divided and extreme), and now, that "future controls us" --- the US, and the whole planet.
Heck of a job for the global Empire, Gipper, you shilling moron!
Alan MacDonald
Liberty & democracy over violent empire -- People's Party 2012.
My cousin who is a commander in the navy had dinner with my family a couple years back and said "of course we're in the desert for the oil! Sure, we'll buy it from them, we're capitalists! But, the real reason we're there is to show the world that the US military will not go thirsty in their lifetimes: should anyone in the world think for a hot second the US can't fuel its military, then the US loses its security and position as world leader. The US and Europe are in the middle east because they need to demonstrate that they can stabilize the region well enough to safely extract the oil...and gas."
We are there to keep the last vestiges of the modern world held together.
digaboo, you note, "We are there to keep the last vestiges of the modern world held together", to which I would only clarify that, we are there to keep the last vestiges of the disguised global Empire alive --- which controls our former country (and others like the UK, Israel, etc) by hiding behind the facade of the Empire's bought and owned TWO-Party modern "Vichy" sham of faux democratic government, aided by it's equally 'Vichy' corporatist media shills.
Yes, digaboo, the global Empire's mask is finally coming off, and Empire is being recognized as the "Old Core" of all problems "abroad" and "at home" --- as Hannah Arendt presciently said:
"Empire abroad entails tyranny at home".
Now we just have to get the vast majority of good, average, middle/working-class Americans to understand what you do and the confrontation "Against Empire" (Parenti), against this "Inverted Totalitarianism" (Wolin), and against this "Empire of Illusion" (Hedges) to rise up in solidarity against a single evil, rather than being distracted and diverted by the Empire into fighting dozens of false "symptom problems" all of which Empire causes, and avoid being dissipated into dozens of "identity political issues" before the Empire right her in River City completes its transition to absolute tyranny in the US.
The battle against this singular, signal, and seminal cancerous tumor of global Empire must be diagnosed, confronted, and excised here in America by Americans for the same reason that lung cancer must be removed surgically from the lung and not the toes and fingers in the territories of the hidden Empire!
Enraged and enjoined global citizens can help us in this confrontation, but Americans must be responsible to carry the fight "Against Empire" in America because at heart it hides in plain sight in the burning kitchen of our own fading democracy.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Liberty & democracy over violent empire -- People's Party 2012
Global People's Anti-Empire Action -- 2011/NOW!
Remember when Bush early on... a year or so before the war... was quoted as remarking he wasn't going to let any 2-bit dictator (Sadam) sit on all that oil? Yeah, well that's how those who read the news KNEW what this was all about.
Our Senators say they were not given the right information. HAH. If you read the newspaper, yes, even the newspaper, or magazines, you should have known.
Not buying those arguments.
It is all about oil all the time. If we go to war it is always for a corporation. I think the country is just sick of all this but we have no control. So much for democracy... or the "experiment" of democracy.
Shocked that there is no coverage of this in the corporate media...
On the one hand, such purposeful ignoring of base truths is a key way that the powers-that-be maintain their facade.
On the other hand, the facade may hide specific pieces of knowledge from wide circulation, but it cannot hide the fundamental breaking apart of the structure of our empire. As it all falls apart, everyone knows it, in different ways, with varying degrees of comprehension, until it crashes down.
Shocked? You must lead a sheltered life. The Fawning Corporate Media (I like that) gets caught in one lie after another, but like a good politician they admit nothing. Hopefully the piper will be paid, but probably by the wrong people.
Hi JimX,
Um, do we need an "irony alert" here? i hate emoticons. Maybe i should post in pink or something. Or write "Shocked; shocked!" like in Casablanca.
Note the second sentence in my original post, where i use the word "purposeful."
I'm sorry; I shouldn't post on here when I'm dead tired (which is most of the time here lately). And then I don't keep up with what I have read and written....
It's all good.
Is the US too big to fail...?
For justice and our world's sake, I hope not.
Remember, a Bush Maladministration official briefly referred to "Operation Iraqi Freedom" as "Operation Iraqi Liberation" (OIL) in the first "Shock & Awe" days of the invasion.
This was afterwards disclaimed by authorities and Internet hoax and fact-checking sites as an "(urban) myth", perhaps arising from a Jay Leno joke from around that time.
But this was in turn rebutted by evidence that then White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer used the term, which allegedly can be found in a video clip in the BBC documentary 'Bush Family Fortunes' and transcripts of White House press briefings on From March 24 and April 1, 2003.
(I write "allegedly" because the actual links to the transcripts don't work, FWIW; the Whitehouse.gov site only archives to 2009. The BBC documentary is on line, but I can't be bothered scrutinizing it to verify the usage.)
Even if it was just a "Freudian slip" on Fleischer's part, it's telling.
Otherwise:
"Al Qaeda’s Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks gave Bush and Cheney the political opening they needed to turn their designs on Iraqi oil into reality."
Damn those Nineteen Lone Nuts and their Elusive Super-Villain Mentor! They obviously had no idea what a big favor they were doing for their sworn adversary!
O.S. , cheers,remember that Obamas' speech writers came up with the "Win the Future"slogan,(W.T.F.) for the S.O.T.U .address.That was almost as transparent a "Freudian slip" as the Presidents non-recovery plan!
Ray could say stuff about 'enduring bases'that we will never read here,and you can bet that transparent obvious double speak will continue.The U.S. electorate is as dumb as a rock,and possibly less intellegent.
peace (sorry rocks ,no offence)
"The U.S. electorate is as dumb as a rock,and possibly less intellegent.
peace (sorry rocks ,no offence)"
I think that's a bit harsh, considering that some of those rocks have lost friends and family members in conflicts that they now find were waged on false pretenses. I can understand to a degree, why they wish to remain clueless. The actual facts would prove to be very painful and in some cases their ignorance is a means of survival. It's much easier to continue the myths of brave heros and a noble endeavors. Much like how we are being ask to view our most current police endeavor in Libya.
..
Here's a copy of my CD comment from '08 referring to my 5 year old comments (since '03) about the specific planning of this "oil war" that this global Empire falsely launched.
I was never in doubt, Ray:
"Posted by amacd
Oct 13 2008 - 5:53pm
Alan MacDonald
I've been posting this for 5 years:
The hidden secret of this 'smash and grab' OIL-WAR occurred in March of 2001 when then Exxon CEO Lee Raymond addressed Cheney's secret energy/war planning meeting (in front of Pentagon brass who Cheney strangely ordering into this supposed 'energy' meeting), and said:
"In the near future, the acquisition of oil will not be able to be achieved through 'market based' forces (IE. buying the stuff), but will need to be secured through 'extra-market based' forces" (IE. military force).
Cheney did not have to tell the Pentagon brass what Raymond meant by 'extra-market based' forces --- but the US people took 7 years, a 'false flagged' attack that killed 3000 on 9/11, an illegal preemptive war crime against Iraq, over 4000 dead US 'working-class' kids, and millions of Iraqi innocent civilian deaths --- and now a looming nuclear war with Iran, to understand what Cheney and Raymond were planning in the very first days of the Bush 'corporatist Empire'."
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2008/10/13-2
There are now TWO key points to understand --- ELEVEN YEARS AFTER THE EMPIRE was already in full control of our former country (and others: UK, Israel, etc.) by hiding behind the facade of its TWO-Party modernized "Vichy" sham of faux-democratic government (aided by an equally "Vichy" corporatist media):
1. That violent "Empire" is the Unspeakable evil that is the causal cancer behind ALL violence; both overtly "abroad" through thrusting the "tip of the Empire's spear in the face" of troublesome people in the territories, and more subtly "at home" through economic oppression, spying, police-state intimidation, and the rising tyranny of "inverted totalitarianism" (Wolin).
2. That only by recognizing, understanding, exposing, and confronting this disguised "Empire" --- and accurately speaking it's name as 'an Empire' --- can the Unspeakable be excised, and our fragile earth and species saved from extinction.
As Hannah Arendt presciently warned, based on a lifetime of studying empires and her painful experience under the wannabe global Nazi Empire; "Empire abroad entails tyranny at home".
We are now under a far more effective global Empire than Hitler or Goebbels ever dreamed of constructing, and this was achieved by merely employing a TWO-Party "Vichy" facade, instead of their crude and thinly veiled One-Party "Vichy" trick in France --- which the US first recognized (and then improved upon).
In a recent CD article, "Waiting for the Spark", Nader accurately noted that the confrontation with Empire can arise much faster than most think, and with much more deadly effect on Empire than the Empire wants to believe --- as Mubarak, Saleh, Walker, Kasich, and others have discovered.
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/04/19-4
But, our survival depends on 'calling-out' Empire, on naming the Unspeakable for what it is, 'Empire', on recognizing that we "have a problem right here in River City and that begins with 'E', and that stands for Empire", and finally on really understanding that we must act together in solidarity to confront and excise this singular, signal, seminal, but hidden "causal cancer" that is behind all the 'symptom problems' like; foreign oil wars, torture, spying, environmental destruction, domestic economic oppression, bipartisan political deceit, corporate rape, Wall Street looting, and the rising fascist tyranny that we are now only beginning to experience a tiny part of the pain that would otherwise enslave us all.
This is the last chance we will have to act together to reassert that original American founding dream of liberty and democracy over violent empire.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Liberty & democracy over violent empire -- People's Party 2012
Global People's Anti-Empire Action -- 2011/NOW!
From the article:
"Suskind wrote, “Documents were being prepared by the Defense Intelligence Agency, Rumsfeld’s intelligence arm, mapping Iraq’s oil fields and exploration areas and listing companies that might be interested in leveraging the precious asset.”
Not only were maps prepared, a probable cause was REQUIRED. If we recognize that "they" lied about the oil, and lied about the WMD that were never in Iraq to begin with, why not recognize that they ALSO lied about the trigger THEY installed to make their lustful dreams of oil come true? Seems they had the storyboard drawn up in response to 911's "perpetrators" before ANY evidence was collected. And many of us in this forum know that quite a bit of that evidence was given sophisticated help in mysteriously "disappearing."
OS: I caught that slick rejoinder (related to 911) you offered in another thread as response to a poster repeating, ad nauseum, the official narrative. Nice work.
I am glad to see McGovern acknowledge AT LEAST 3 key factors for the War of Aggression directed at Iraq. Sometimes he's made it too much about Israel. No doubt Israel IS a factor, but I'd say oil is #1. He also left out the fact that the MIC has to "move inventory." What better way to demand $ to replace "lost product" then to have a war which calls for the use of all the expensive KILLER weaponry? McGovern didn't even reference the fact that after The Cold War, the MIC needed a new raison d'etre. All those Muslim terrorists, already featured in Hollywood movies as "the bad guys," would serve the purpose! Soft propaganda moving through the collective consciousness via the mask of entertainment works wonders (when it comes to manufacturing consent for the latest "enemy.")
There are sick cookies, the type of minds that design weapons, who apparently actually enjoy seeing them used... the human losses, those passed off as collateral damage, don't even register on their morally-retarded interior "scales." And so, the carnage, America's major product--The Killing Fields--continues. I believe the magnitude of earth changes and the eventual full implosion of our own economy (part karmic blowback for war, part karmic blowback for unapologetic ecocide, and part karmic blowback for Wall St trafficking so thoroughly in the FINANCIAL weapons of mass destruction) will place a knife in the heart of this beast. It will NOT resurrect, but surviving humanity indeed will.
SR please do not forget the founding corrupt Karma of genocide and slavery.
One oft overlooked reason for the attack on Iraq is that Saddam and Chavez were collaborating in accepting only Euros for oil payments, thus speeding the demise of the US dollar as world reserve currrency, I believe Saddam may have actually implemented this Euro only policy shortly before the War of aggression against the Peace.
Exactly right. And Gaddafi "initiated a movement to refuse the dollar and the euro, and called on Arab and African nations to use a new currency instead, the gold dinar. Gaddafi suggested establishing a united African continent, with its 200 million people using this single currency.
During the past year, the idea was approved by many Arab countries and most African countries. The only opponents were the Republic of South Africa and the head of the League of Arab States. The initiative was viewed negatively by the USA and the European Union, with French President Nicolas Sarkozy calling Libya a threat to the financial security of mankind; but Gaddafi was not swayed and continued his push for the creation of a united Africa."
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MD14Ak02.html
But that's a big secret, or perhaps regular citizens aren't expected to understand the complexity of the issue.
Glenn: I agree on all counts.
Often I've stated in this forum that there are always a number of factors that culminate in, or lead to the manifestation of any event. Certainly at least as much goes into the calculations behind nefarious US foreign and domestic policy-making.
There are probably factors beyond the ones you mentioned, added to the ones I related, added to those initially offered by McGovern.
Thanks for building on my point.
Also Iran has spoken openly of moving off dollar-denomination of oil.
Very specific pattern, countries that threaten to move off dollar-denomination of oil, get demonized and if it gets that far, destroyed.
No surprise here. It was obvious all along. More than that, ever since the ban on industrial hemp in 1937, most of our wars with other nations were about oil more than anything else? Is that gonna change? Not until the last drop is sucked high and dry.
Hemp's a great idea but we need authors to write about oil forever. Can't kill that business now can we?
Max,
I can only imagine how much hemp would need to be grown to extract enough oil for modern industrial uses. I don't think there is enough surface area on the planet to do so. Well, maybe there is, but what then would we eat?
The argument in favor of alternatives to support our current lifestyle is stillborn, IMO. It is our lifestyle that is the problem, not how we fuel it.
"What is not sustainable cannot be sustained." Chalmers Johnson
Ted, true. I was just having this angry leftover feeling after running into another conversation on this hate suburban thing. I was once called a "spammer" and an "embed" for bringing up hemp so often months ago. I thought I got over it but this article threw me off trying to frame it all as a "surprise". I dunno but here's what pisses me off even on this site and on Alternet. It's bad enough that really good ideas never get listened to, posted as articles, or anything. The articles that are supposed to be about being surprised or disappointed then just rub me off in the wrong direction and then I'll get pissed off at their failure to connect the dots towards the bigger picture.
I can't expect hemp to do everything and I know each of us has our part to do. Blogging less frequently and taking a vacation from the blogs when discussions go haywire seems to be working. The reason I mentioned this is that the fact that nearly every blog including this one has a lot of intrigue: has intrigue going on all over : posters jumping on each other because one's a "truther" while the other one is allegedly "cointel pro", some claiming that certain posters have been out to get them for a long time, jumping on posters of sexism against men or women just because they disagree on some aspects of feminism or whatever gender ideology, "scholarly" vs "low IQ", tag team, sock puppets, embeds, username changes, paid industry shills though that can be true when the offender shows it obvious enough, usual suspects, psyops wars, and other crazies for flaming. Petty arguments and ad hominem attacks can often turn ugly and discourage otherwise great discussions. I've come to think over the years that like the television, we humans are prone to allowing the Internet to further mess up our already flawed lifestyles. I can't dictate people's lifestyles but all I can do is give feedback on the difference it all makes. I'm already feeling better taking a vacation from Alternet knowing that nothing ever changes and that what people post often gets forgotten except by those who wanna take and use posts against people they personally hate. The dominant bullies can keep their turf and blow off all the hot air they want. They can take the blame for burning off more fossil fuels while the rest of us can prepare for transitions and improvements as fossil fuels diminish in supply and go up in prices. Even Cal Thomas admitted that we will never get gas as low as a dollar a gallon even if crude oil prices go back down. I'll blame the capitalist pigs for rigging the market but I'll take some responsibility for messing up too and work on correcting it.
Max,
Take a deep breath - you still seem pretty wound up. In the end, this is a blog in cyberspace with ideas and thoughts by people you will never meet. Some are great ideas, some are foolish ideas, some are by trolls, some are by plants, most are by people like you and me who are being whipsawed and made crazy by the utter stupidity of the way things are.
As far as crude oil prices not going back down - good! Haven't most of us here read (and felt) the dire predictions for climate change? Do we really think, given all we've seen, that industrialized people are going to willingly give up their lifestyle, even knowing what's ahead? I am not in favor of Obama opening up the Strategic Oil Reserve because I do not want gas prices to go down. I know it will create pain and put Americans in more distress, but addicts need to feel distress before they can kick the habit. We are a world of addicts and if we do not get off our drug, it will surely kill us.
Chill, guy. Go out into the garden. That's what I'm about to do right now.
Peace.
You're not alone in not wanting gas prices to go down and I'm not talking about the oil companies. It seems that we all, American or even foreign, take crude oil prices for granted and that'll have to change. I wished we didn't have to do it the hard way but I guess that's our fate. I'm still willing to wager that when the dust settles, we'll not have too much to lose.
By the way, a trip to the garden beats a trip to the church on Sundays. :-)
Amen ;-)
MAX: Thanks for identifying the tactics of the embeds. Your derogatory remark about those who suggest posters deliberately go after them leaves out ALL the relevant subtext, which is to say VALID data supporting the allegation. Plus it's rather amusing coming from you, since you sought to reach ME via my personal email, unsolicited, as have others who have backgrounds in "I.T." Interesting how those most likely to pursue this course are first to suggest it is not taking place at all. It's convenient to suggest it's just the work of an active imagination, about as convincing as labeling those who equated OIL with motive for attacking Iraq War as conspiracy theorists. Ditto those who challenge the 911 official narrative, or those who STILL understand climate change and its dangers, in spite of efforts to make the subject mostly about Al Gore's lifestyle.
This forum IS compromised ... and when my reputation is targetted, you can be damned sure that I will keep a record of it. It's all documented... and as you may recall, your screen name (and convulsed dialog) ignited the first wave prompting me to take this route.
I don't recall ever sending you an unsolicited email. Only once did I send you a personal email of courtesy and thanking you for your contributions to this forum and that's to be called "unsolicited" ? What does my having an I.T. background have to do with anything? Are you suggesting that anyone who works in I.T. is bad? I'm not following you.
"Your derogatory remark about those who suggest posters deliberately go after them leaves out ALL the relevant subtext, which is to say VALID data supporting the allegation. "
I'm only referring to posters who jump over other posters without valid data or reasoning. If you're not one of them and I assume you're not, then don't worry about it.
"This forum IS compromised ... "
Every forum is compromised and I don't like it either but what do you want, a utopia? Sorry but you're on your own IF that's what you want. If not, then perhaps we can come to some reasonable agreement about it. If a rightwinger wants to make trouble in this forum, I knock him or her down on whatever arguments they throw at us.
"when my reputation is targetted, you can be damned sure that I will keep a record of it. It's all documented... and as you may recall, your screen name (and convulsed dialog) ignited the first wave prompting me to take this route."
I know we crossed swords when I first came to this site and I still apologize for my letting it out that I worked for a company related to the military unintentionally threw you and others off. I have come to understand why I'd be looked at as a "terrorist" at first. There's no doubt that it's hard to understand at first how a progressive or liberal could think of going against their own good will. But I'm glad that unlike some people who are nothing but war baiters and the worst of drama kings with people who have even the slightest of disagreements with them, you were and still are more open-minded and willing to consider the relationship between employment and MIC which so few articles bother to touch on. I haven't targeted your reputation especially since we last reconciled in 2009. I can refresh your memory of our improved and cordial discussions ever since on this forum. I dunno what I said that threw you off but whatever it was, I didn't mean for it to end up that way and I apologize for scaring you into it.
If your lifestyle does harm, causes death and destruction, it needs to be changed.
If you overconsume, it needs to lessen.
If you use poisonous fuels it needs to stop.
Renewables are life, fossil and Nuke are death.
Its not one or another its both, reduce and change fuels and materials.
After all the evidence coming about the extent of lies within the Bush administration, we still have Ray saying absurd things like, "Al Qaeda’s Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks".
Why do they get a pass on 911, after the overwhelming amount of evidence has been presented that challenges Bush's official story?
It's an astonishing acquiescence in the face of the pressure exerted by the Respectable Class.