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
|
|
Iran and Iraq:
The real targets of the
Afghan war
By Christopher King
Redress, Al-Jazeerah & ccun.org, March 1, 2010
The
mystery of the Afghanistan war
Christopher King argues that “a situation exists in which it may
be in the interests of the United States to seek a ‘cold war’ situation with
Russia and China as a pretext for defaulting on its external debt, attacking
Iran, taking direct control of all Middle Eastern oilfields and effective
control of Europe”.
Let us consider a puzzle about the
Afghanistan war. Recently, Lieutenant-General Hamid Gul, formerly of the
Pakistani army and head of the country’s Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI)
agency (1987-89),
remarked: “In this situation, what are the Americans trying to achieve –
I don't know. There is much ambiguity about their political objectives.
Every military conflict must have a political purpose. I cannot discern that
there is any political purpose.”
Economic irrationality of US wars
I had been thinking the same thing. General Gul had a key role in
supplying matériel to the Afghan mujahidin and their defeat of the Soviet
Union. He knows what is going on. If General Gul with his background and
connections cannot understand American political objectives, they must be
very unusual. He surmises for want of a better explanation that the
motivation is domestic American politics. I have
said previously
that these wars are primarily for the US to consolidate its control of
Europe and its economy through US bases and NATO. I believe this to be the
US’s European objective but it cannot be the entire picture either.
What may be puzzling General Gul is the cost of these wars. Their cost is
completely disproportionate to any evident benefits. An estimate for all-in
costs for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars is USD 3 trillion to date. There is
no evidence that the US is getting a commensurate return from its occupation
of Iraq; nor that there is any significant return to be had from Afghanistan
beyond perhaps building some pipelines that might more easily have been
built by bribing the Taliban. This figure demands a very good reason –
something at whole-country economic level.
The US might be acting
irrationally in endangering its economy by diverting resources from
essential economic restructuring for religious reasons, party electoral
advantage or feeding its military-industrial complex. Alternatively, these
invasions are part of a rational plan. Let us assume that a rational
strategic plan underlies them and make an attempt to identify it. We should
also assume that to justify the enormous cost of these wars there must be an
economic motive since they are wars of choice. We should note too that they
take place in a world context of increasingly scarce and costly commodities
and energy supplies, an increasing world population and the rise of the
Asian economies.
"Sooner or later, other countries will
cease to buy US treasuries. China and others will probably
sell their treasury debt. At this point, they could be
accused of economic terrorism, a term that the US
increasingly uses as a justification for a conflict
situation." |
|
Now, at the same time as supporting its wars, the US has a crisis deriving
from medicare/welfare costs. The ex-comptroller-general of the US
government, the government’s chief accountant, David M. Walker, spent years
attempting to get future medicare obligations taken seriously. He resigned,
evidently in frustration. The medicare liability is of
government bankruptcy proportions. At present, President Barack Obama is
finding difficulty in having legislation to deal with this passed. Even if
passed, it will evidently have severe, perhaps unworkable deficiencies.
This is at a time when the projected 2010 US national debt is USD 13.7
trillion with GDP 13.1 trillion and the annual budget deficit USD 1.3
trillion. With interest payable on debt at about 500 billion, any increase
in the interest rate that the US must pay will be very serious. This could
come about if the US government finds it difficult to place its borrowing
requirements and roll over current debt falling due. In this respect, China
has about USD 1 trillion of US debt, has recently sold USD 34 billion and is
showing reluctance to buy more. These figures are of a scale relevant to
making sense of the USD 3 trillion cost of the US’s Middle East wars.
If its supporting countries should cease buying debt or, worse, sell
their existing US debt, US finances would be in deep trouble. Russia is now
a seller rather than buyer of US securities due to its waning confidence in
the US economy, to say nothing of US missiles planned for its borders. An
independent report suggests that at the present time the Federal Reserve
might be secretly buying-in government securities for which there is no
demand. Additionally, China’s currency is pegged against the dollar; the US
considers that the renminbi is seriously undervalued, adding to China’s
trading advantage and would like it revalued. The Chinese might do this soon
– or might not.
The US, therefore, owes a great deal, has high
unemployment due to the recession triggered by its own policies and bankers
and will probably find borrowing increasingly difficult. Convenient figures
are
here. Together with increasing costs of medicare and social security,
the US’s problems can be expected to get worse. Although GDP is forecast to
improve, this will be mainly in the financial services sector. Benefits do
not “trickle down” significantly within the economy and are a short-term
possibility. The US’s most serious structural problem is the loss of
manufacturing employment because manufacturing has shifted to Asia. Long
term, the US faces severe unemployment and decline in its economy and living
standards.
Three major fundamental problems are therefore loss of manufacturing
jobs, high present and future government expenditure and issues arising from
the need for external borrowing. The central problem, however, is loss of
high value-added jobs from which all other problems flow. US manufacturing
needs to be rebuilt but the present environment in the US is uncompetitive
with Asia and, as matters stand, this cannot occur.
A solution to
this problem is hinted at by the current government inquiry relating to
safety issues around Toyota cars. Toyota imports about 45 per cent of its
cars into the US, so it is possible that the purpose of this inquiry is to
put pressure on Toyota to manufacture 100 per cent within the US, so
increasing employment, reducing price competition with US manufacturers and
gaining other benefits. As a general approach, however, this would not solve
the US’s problems. Something more radical would be needed.
“Economic terrorism” – a new raison d'être for a new era of conflict?
The more radical approach that the US appears to be pursuing is to simply
continue to do what it is doing now, that is, to continue to borrow and
overspend in the interests of domestic stability. Sooner or later, other
countries will cease to buy US treasuries. China and others will probably
sell their treasury debt. At this point, they could be accused of economic
terrorism, a term that the US increasingly uses as a justification for a
conflict situation. Other grounds might also be found for conflict,
particularly with China, for example over Chinese unwillingness to support
sanctions against Iran. The point would be to find a pretext for trade
sanctions against China in order to revitalize US manufacturing and
re-create US jobs. It would be an attempt to recreate the path of
industrialization that the US followed in becoming an economic superpower.
"Only being bogged down in Afghanistan
appears to prevent the US from attacking Iran and seizing
its oilfields as it obviously wishes to do... The Taliban
resurgence has caused a delay in (what we may assume to be)
this plan." |
|
Such a strategy would probably involve default on US debt. This would
create international chaos but it would be external to the US and temporary
for it for an important reason. The US would hope to control the oil
reserves of the Middle East and enjoy not only energy security but an energy
export monopoly. Few other industrialized countries would have such
security. The US would also be in a position to barter oil for raw materials
and, because of its military strength, would be untouchable. Its long-term
objective would be to restructure the world order around its own policies
enforced by its control of most exportable energy and its military
capabilities.
Iran and Iraq – the real targets of the Afghan war
I have said previously
that the US cannot leave Iraq. A constant stream of excuses for staying are
now emerging, such as
this one
by Thomas E. Ricks in the New York Times, who with others, presses
the US’s concern for stability and the welfare of the Iraqi people. Saudi
Arabia is already in America’s pocket, part of its new “sphere of influence”
or “area of special strategic importance”. Only being bogged down in
Afghanistan appears to prevent the US from attacking Iran and seizing its
oilfields as it obviously wishes to do. From this viewpoint, the attack on
Afghanistan would have been useful if it could have been done quickly and
finally. It might then have been used as a base. When US planners thought
that this had in fact been accomplished they moved on to Iraq as the next
publicly acceptable target. The Taliban resurgence has caused a delay in
(what we may assume to be) this plan.
In the meantime, Iran has been
alerted. The US covets its oil reserves but Iran has strong conventional
armed forces. They would be difficult to defeat as Saddam Hussein found.
Worse, although the US intelligence services themselves report that it does
not have a nuclear weapons programme, Iran’s growing U235 enrichment
capability might give it the ability to create nuclear weapons in a
relatively short time. This could be the explanation why the US is at pains
to discover what knowledge of nuclear weapons construction Iran possesses
and the importance it places on past research which, with current
International Atomic Energy Agency inspections, would seem to be irrelevant.
This, therefore, is a plausible reason for the otherwise inexplicable
virulence of US anti-Iran propaganda and sanctions. The US makes unprovable
accusations of Iran’s intention to create nuclear weapons and, in the face
of all evidence to the contrary, makes irrational demands to stop Iran’s
uranium enrichment. Its insistence on a harsh sanctions regime follows the
same path as it followed before attacking Iraq. If anything, it is giving
Iran good reasons to develop a weapons programme.
It is not, we might
conjecture, merely that the US wishes to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear
weapons. Afghan resistance and the Washington’s failure to quickly invade
and control Iran prevents the US from controlling the entire Middle East and
world oil exports. Meanwhile, Iran’s continued independence allows it to
further develop its potential for nuclear weapons production as well as
maintaining its potential for acting as a focus of resistance in the Middle
East. If Iran were to have nuclear weapons it might justifiably use them
against Israel or the US bases in Iraq and Afghanistan in the event of an
attack against it.
This, then, is Afghanistan’s importance. I
suggest that Afghanistan is in itself unimportant. It appears that the US
considered that invading and holding Afghanistan would be easy, as in fact
it was at first. The invasion was probably conceived as a classical army
manoeuvre in outflanking Iran which, along with Iraq, were the primary
targets. Control of Afghanistan on Iran’s eastern side, together with Iraq
on Iran’s western border makes enforcement of sanctions against Iran more
effective and facilitates invasion. This was probably the reason why the US
chose to attack Afghanistan and the Taliban, against whom it has no
legitimate quarrel, on the pretext that they “gave safe haven” to Al-Qaeda.
Having made this error, it finds disengaging to be highly problematic.
If this analysis is correct, the Afghan Taliban are effectively
defending the rest of the world from a US-planned economic meltdown in
delaying a US attack on Iran and a crisis with China. If such an events
should occur, there would be widespread suffering, starvation and the
devastation of many economies. This would suit US purposes as such countries
could not easily challenge the exploitation of their resources, whether
mineral or agricultural. The US has proved itself to be indifferent to the
suffering of others while loudly proclaiming its championship of the poor
and oppressed.
US-Israel axis of occupation
Without de facto control of the entire Middle East, the outcome
of world economic meltdown would be much more uncertain for the US. The
reliance on de facto occupation is the strategy of Israel’s
occupation both of the land on which it stands and the construction of
settlements. This factor together with the hint of empire and cultural
continuity that are the narrative of Jewish culture suggest that Jewish
Zionist planners are prominent in US strategic planning. Such a plan for US
Middle Eastern control also benefits Israel of course and would be merely an
extension of current Israeli practice in concert with the US.
"The indication is that Israel has a vital
role in US Middle Eastern planning and possibly action." |
|
In this connection, we might recall the extraordinary Israeli confidence
that Israel can both manipulate the US and ignore US demands to cease
settlement-building activities while continuing to receive substantial
military and financial aid. President Obama has had to back off from such
demands. The indication is that Israel has a vital role in US Middle Eastern
planning and possibly action. Despite Israel’s desire to unilaterally attack
Iran, the US is discouraging this, conceivably because, occupied in
Afghanistan, it is at present unable to take advantage of such an attack
with a simultaneous invasion. There appears to be no other means by
which the US might restore its industrial and manufacturing strength and at
the same time maintain its position as the most powerful country in the
world. There is good reason to suppose the development of a multipolar world
to be unacceptable to the US. What would be the reactions of other countries
in terms of realpolitik? Very little could be done to reverse such
a de facto confiscation of 60 per cent of the world’s oil reserves
due to the US’s nuclear and military capabilities.
This is a zero-sum
scenario in which the US gains what the rest of the world loses. In reality,
this course is the only one open to the US if it maintains its present
policies since they are leading it to economic collapse. To maintain its
publicly-stated ambition to remain the most powerful country in the world,
this appears to be its only option: to create chaos for others while
regenerating its own manufacturing base on a war footing. In terms of
economic policy, this course eventually generates export markets in the
countries whose economies it ruins, reverting to a classical colonial model.
There are no indications that the US values a strategy that
increases benefits for all countries, for example by investing the cost of
its Middle Eastern wars in hydrogen fusion energy research. Indeed, by
contrast with the UK’s internationally-supported energy-orientated fusion
research programme, the US’s fusion programme is weapons orientated.
A new cold war with Russia
Ideally, the US would like the European Union as partner in this
adventure and with the traitor Anthony Blair’s assistance has succeeded in
involving the EU as far as invading Iraq and Afghanistan. However, the
position of the EU is increasingly equivocal. ++In concert with Russia as an
energy and resources supplier, the EU could maintain a reasonable
equilibrium if the US should trigger world economic meltdown. The US appears
to be determined to undermine such a relationship. To this end it persists
in installing missiles on Russia’s border against all reason. After much
talk about cooperation with Russia on arms, the US is currently in
talks with
Romania with a view to installing interceptor missiles on its territory.
The only purpose that these could possibly have is as a provocation and
disruption of EU-Russian relations. We have also seen the US-inspired
Georgian provocation of Russia and problems with transit of Russian gas
through Ukraine. A return to cold war relationships with Russia would be the
US ideal.
At some point the US must retrieve jobs from China and Asia
generally. This might occur during a period of world instability following a
US financial meltdown or specific cause for breaking off relations with
China in particular might be found. China’s support of Iran would be a
useful pretext. The present situation in which China holds, in the form of
US debt, an economic weapon against the US is intolerable from what we know
of the US and its obsession with power and control.
It is noteworthy
that funding for the US Intelligence Authorization Act 2010 was only passed
after deleting prohibitions on torture and its penalties from the Act.
Torture by the US intelligence services is now overtly legal and without
penalty.
From a government with such morality, anything is possible.
It is essential that the UK and EU hold to the rule of international law and
the objective of peaceful relationships between countries. It is also
essential to make alliances based on peace and to abandon current EU
collaboration with the US in Middle Eastern aggression. It is not only
morally wrong but the route to EU self-enslavement to the US.
In
summary, a situation exists in which it may be in the interests of the
United States to seek a “cold war” situation with Russia and China as a
pretext for defaulting on its external debt, attacking Iran, taking direct
control of all Middle Eastern oilfields and effective control of Europe.
There are indications in the US’s NATO First Act and the military occupation
of Iraq and Afghanistan that such a plan may be in progress.
Let us
contemplate this thought: Far from being enemies of Europe, the Afghan
Taliban and Iran may be unknowingly holding off a chaotic world economic
meltdown planned by the United States and Israel.
Christopher King is a retired
consultant and lecturer in management and marketing. He lives in London,
UK. Thanks to antiwar.com for ome of
the information used in this article .
|
|
|