Al-Jazeerah History
Archives
Mission & Name
Conflict Terminology
Editorials
Gaza Holocaust
Gulf War
Isdood
Islam
News
News Photos
Opinion
Editorials
US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
www.aljazeerah.info
|
|
How America and Britain Lost the Wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan?
By Mahboob A. Khawaja
ccun.org, January 11, 2010
Wars are planned, financed and
fought by governments, not by groups or ordinary people. Wars are based on
political agendas and they long for complete control over resources,
people and territory. Most wars would have multiple reasons, domestic,
foreign and global outreach. The American-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
are fought to maintain US domination worldwide, to occupy the untapped
natural resources of the Middle East, in particular oil and gas, and to
protect the value of American dollar as a stable international reserve
currency. In September 2000, the proactive policy paper written by the
neoconservative intellectuals to envision the "Project for the New
American Century" (PNAC): sets the milestone, seeking American domination
over the rest of the world powers and to meet its energy needs, plans to
occupy by force all the oil resources in the Arab Middle East. The
blueprint supports military occupation of the oil-exporting Arab countries
and regime change where it is necessary - to fulfill the PNAC policy aims
of global domination. Centuries ago, German historian Carl Von Clausewitz
wrote On War: “War is not merely a political act but also a real political
instrument, a continuation of political commerce, a carrying out of the
same by other means.” The wars are declared by few and not the
majority masses. The small ruling elite who plans and wages war is often
afraid of citizenry reaction and refusal to accept the rationality of a
war. Throughout history, European nationalism institutionalized the
doctrine of war as a necessity to promote national interest and racial
superiority over "the other" by using war as a means to that end. Most
proponents of wars have used “fear” as one of the major instruments of
propaganda and manipulation to perpetuate allegiance from the ordinary
folks to the elite warmongers in a crisis situation. Sheldon Richman (“War
is Government Program” ICS, 05/2007), notes that “war is more dangerous
than other government programs and not just for the obvious reason – mass
murder….war is useful in keeping the population in a state of fear and
therefore trustful of their rulers.” Ordinary citizens do not
have passion for war as it disturbs their safety and security, and
destroys the living habitats. The ruling elite, the actual warmongers,
force people to think in extreme terms of hatred and rejection of others
so that people would be forced to align with the rulers to support and
finance the war efforts. Sheldon Richman describes how Herman Goering,
Hitler’s second in command, understood the discourse of war making: “Of
course the people don’t want war….but after all, it’s the leaders of the
country who determine the policy, and it’s always a simple matter to drag
the people along, whether, it’s a democracy or a fascist dictatorship or a
parliament or a Communist dictatorship.” (Sheldon Richman, “War is
Government Program”) Paul Craig Roberts (“The Collapse of America
Power”: ICS, 03/2008), attempts to explain how the British Empire had
collapsed once its financial assets were depleted because of the 2nd World
War debts. Correlli Barnett (The Collapse of British Power, 1972) states
that at the beginning of the WW2, Britain had limited gold and foreign
exchange to meet the pressing demands of the war. The British Government
asked the U.S. to help finance their ability to sustain the war. Thus,
‘this dependency signaled the end of British power.’ For its draconian
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, America is heavily dependent on China, Japan
and Saudi Arabia. It is well known that American treasury owes trillions
of dollars to its foreign debtors and therefore, its financial dependency
is increasingly becoming an obvious indicator of the end of American
global hegemony and wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Now that the US
financial system has broken down and some of the leading banking
institutions have gone into bankruptcy, the roller coaster repercussions
can be seen across the American economic, social and political spectrum of
life. Under the Bush administration, American capability and vitality has
shrunk and in fact appears to be dismantled as a superpower in global
affairs. It is no wonder that other nations of world no longer seem to
take the U.S. and its traditional influence, seriously. In The
Collapse of American Power, Paul Craig Roberts stated: "Noam
Chomsky recently wrote that America thinks that it owns the world. That is
definitely the view of the neoconized Bush administration. But the fact of
the matter is that the US owes the world. The US "superpower" cannot even
finance its own domestic operations, much less its gratuitous wars except
via the kindness of foreigners to lend it money that cannot be repaid."http://www.counterpunch.org/roberts03182008.html
It is undeniable that the US is “bankrupt” because of the on-going
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. David M. Walker Comptroller General of the
US and Head of the Government Accountability Office (December 2007).
reported that “In everyday language, the US Government cannot pass an
audit.” If one is a financial investor, the obvious question asks
Paul C. Roberts, “would you want to hold debt in a currency that has
such a poor record against the currency of a small island country that was
nuked and defeated in WW II, or against a small landlocked European
country that clings to its independence and is not a member of the EU?”
Consequently, the American dollar is being replaced by Euro and other
currencies and soon is going to be abandoned as a reserve currency in
global financial system. Roberts appears seriously concerned: "I sometimes
wonder if the bankrupt "superpower" will be able to scrape together the
resources to bring home the troops stationed in its hundreds of bases
overseas, or whether they will just be abandoned." This War on
Terror is Bogus Michel Meacher, British Environment Minister under
PM Blair (“This War on Terrorism is Bogus” - (http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2003/sep/06/september11.iraq)
provides reliable insight on the real reasons for the 'War on Terrorism'.
He claims that the "war on terror" is flatly superficial: “the
9/11 attacks gave the US an ideal pretext to use force to secure its
global domination ... the so-called 'war on terrorism' is being used
largely as bogus cover for achieving wider US strategic geopolitical
objectives ... in fact, 9/11 offered an extremely convenient pretext to
put the PNAC plan into action. The evidence again is quite clear that
plans for military action against Afghanistan and Iraq were in hand well
before 9/11.” In their report, the Baker Institute of Public Policy
(April 2001), stated clearly that “the US remains a prisoner of its energy
dilemma. Iraq remains a destabilizing influence to….the flow of oil to
international markets from the Middle East” and it its recommendations
elaborated the dire need that because it was a challenging risk therefore,
the “US military intervention” was the most favored action (Sunday Herald:
Oct 6, 2002). Both the US and United Kingdom have
increasing dependence on imported oil from the Middle East. The overriding
motivation for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, shielded by a political
smokescreen, is that the US and UK will run out of sufficient hydrocarbon
energy supplies whereas, the Arab and Muslim world would control almost
60% of the world oil producing capacity and perhaps more significantly,
95% of the remaining global oil production capacity. The news media
reports indicate that the US is predicted to produce only 39% of its
domestic oil production in 2010, whereas in 1990 it produced 57% of its
total oil consumption. The UK Government projects ”severe” gas shortages
by 2005 and it confirmed that 70% of the electricity will drawn from gas
and 90% of gas will be imported. It is interesting to note that Iraq is
said to have 110 trillion cubic feet of gas reserves in addition to its
approximately 15-20 % of the world oil reserves. Another
research report by the Commission on America’s National Interests (July
2000), observes that the most promising new energy resources are found in
the Caspian Sea, Central Asian region and these would spare the US
exclusive dependence on the Saudi Arabian oil imports. The report outlined
the feasible routes for the Caspian Seas oil deliveries, one hydrocarbon
pipeline via Azerbaijan and Georgia and another pipeline through
Afghanistan and Pakistan would ensure the future strategic demands of the
US government. To review the documentary evidence of the 9/11 events, it
is likely that many strategists have seen the American Government's
failure to avert the 9/11 terrorist attacks as facilitating a much needed
stage drama for its policy aims and an invaluable opportunity to attack
Iraq and Afghanistan – a military intervention already well-planned in
early 2000. The PNAC policy blueprint of September 2000 projects the
transformation of the American power as an unchallengeable global
superpower and the need for some tangible tragedy to make it happen. The
paper states, it “is likely to be a long one in the absence of some
catastrophic and catalyzing event- like a new Pearl Harbor.” In his
analytical view, Minister Michael Meacher (“This War on terrorism is
Bogus” -
http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2003/sep/06/september11.iraq)
states "... 'global war on terrorism' has the hallmarks of a political
myth propagated to pave the way for a wholly different agenda - the US
goal of world hegemony, built around securing by force command over the
oil supplies required to drive the whole project." Did the US
hegemonic war achieve any of its set goals for world domination? Have the
US and UK Governments secured any viable hydrocarbon energy routes to
ensure their depleting gas and oil stocks and the much planned control
over the Arab oil reserves? Is the US dollar still a welcomed
international currency used by the world nations? Mike Whitney
quotes the retired U.S. Army General Ricardo Sanchez challenging the
prevailing notion of the Bush Administration “Mission accomplished" in
Iraq, when he asserted that the occupation of Iraq is a “nightmare with no
end in sight.” The General claimed that the US administration is
“incompetent” and “corrupt” and that the most American people could hope
for under the present circumstances is to “stave off defeat” in Iraq war.
Mike Whitney (“Come and see our overflowing morgues…..come and
see the rubble of your surgical strikes”: An Arab Women Blues by Layla
Anwar), elaborates that General Sanchez is neither against the war nor for
withdrawal. He simply doesn’t like losing…. and the United Sates is
losing.” The General is reported to have admitted that “after more than
four years of fighting , America continues its desperate struggle in Iraq
without any concerted effort to devise a strategy that will achieve
victory in that war-torn country or in the greater conflict against
extremism.” Under President Barrack Obama, the global community looks
anxiously on how and when the promised change will come to America’s
failed strategy in Iraq and Afghanistan. How soon will the new President
will be able to put the body of US politics together again after its
moral, political and financial collapse? America and Britain
appear lost, not knowing how to come out of the self-engineered defeat in
wars against Islam. Both superpowers are led by ignorant and
arrogant elite not having any knowledge to fight the wars except thinking
big and jumping here and there to demonstrate their material possessions
and transitory power. They even do not know the enemy and do not have one,
well defined in their plans to fight against. Masses have sympathies with
the true believers and the Islamic Resistance appears to have lost
nothing. Taliban or other mujahideen fighting against the aggressors know
their enemies and enjoin support of the masses without bribes and bank
balances. They had no banks to declare bankruptcy and no Bush and Cheney
to go down in disgrace. The Mujahideen remain intact and active on all the
fronts even buying weapons from the US and Russia to fight against them.
American, British and Russian business establishments know well how to
trade in global arms market. America and Britain lost the wars , the day
they invaded Iraq and Afghanistan. As a declining superpower, the
US is extremely nervous not knowing how soon it could be replaced by
smaller nations of the developing world or a combination of new emerging
economic powers such as China, India and others. America is in desperate
need of a Navigational Change. President Obama got elected with the moving
slogan - “Yes We Can.” Would President Obama know how to make a
navigational change when there is nothing left to navigate for Change?
Mike Whitney attempts to share a new humane perspective of the
concerns of the Iraqi civilians who are the real victims of this ferocious
war against their country. To reflect on how the adversely affected Iraqi
people think about the on-going America-British led war, occupation and
continuous daily bombing of the civilian population, Layla Anwar, An Arab
Women Blues writes in her website blog: “Everyday, under the
pretext of either al-Qaida, insurgents, militants or whatever imaginary
name you coined, you have not ceased, not even for one day, slaughtering
our innocents……for 4 years, you have not ceased for one single day, not
during holiday periods, not during religious celebrations, not even during
the day your so called God was born….if you have a God that is.”
Dr. Mahboob A. Khawaja, an academic with special
interests in global peace and security and conflict resolution, and
comparative civilizations and author of numerous publications in global
affairs. His latest book includes: To America and Canada with Reason:
Fallacy of Terrorism-Why Muslims. Comments are welcome:
kmahboob@yahoo.com
|
|
|