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COLUMN
EIGHTY-EIGHT, APRIL 1, 2003
(Copyright © 2003 The Blacklisted Journalist)
ANOTHER COMMENT ON THE BUSHIES' PLAN TO TAKE OVER THE WORLD
Subject: For your attention
Date: Tue, 11 Mar 2003 18:39:07 퍍 (UTC)
From: ah2002@blueyonder.co.uk
To: info@blacklistedjournalist.com
Al, sorry if you have already been inundated with articles like this but I thought you may find it useful.
-------
http://www.guardian.co.uk
A wilful blindness:
George Monbiot
Tuesday March 11, 2003
The Guardian
The war in Afghanistan has plainly brought certain benefits
to that country: thousands of girls have gone to school for the first time, for
example, and in some parts of the country women have been able to go back to
work. While more than 3,000 civilians were killed by the bombing, while much of
the country is still controlled by predatory warlords, while most of the
promised assistance has not materialised, while torture is widespread and women
are still beaten in the streets, it would be wrong to minimise gains that have
flowed from the defeat of the Taliban. But, and I realise that it might sound
callous to say it, this does not mean that the Afghan war was a good thing.
What almost all those who supported that war and are now
calling for a new one have forgotten is that there are two sides to every
conflict, and therefore two sets of outcomes to every victory. The Afghan regime
changed, but so, in subtler ways, did the government of the US. It was empowered
not only by its demonstration of military superiority but also by the widespread
support it enjoyed. It has used the licence it was granted in Afghanistan as a
licence to take its war wherever it wants.
Those of us who oppose the impending conquest of Iraq must
recognise that there's a possibility that, if it goes according to plan, it
could improve the lives of many Iraqi people. But to pretend that this battle
begins and ends in Iraq requires a wilful denial of the context in which it
occurs. That context is a blunt attempt by the superpower to reshape the world
to suit itself.
In this week's Observer, David Aaronovitch suggested that,
before September 11, the Bush administration was "relatively indifferent to
the nature of the regimes in the Middle East". Only after America was
attacked was it forced to start taking an interest in the rest of the world.
If Aaronovitch believes this, he would be well-advised to
examine the website of the Project for the New American Century, the pressure
group established by, among others, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Jeb Bush, Paul
Wolfowitz, Lewis Libby, Elliott Abrams and Zalmay Khalilzad, all of whom (except
the president's brother) are now senior officials in the US government.
Its statement of principles, signed by those men on June 3
1997, asserts that the key challenge for the US is "to shape a new century
favourable to American principles and interests". This requires "a
military that is strong and ready to meet both present and future challenges; a
foreign policy that boldly and purposefully promotes American principles abroad;
and national leadership that accepts the United States' global
responsibilities".
On January 26 1998, these men wrote to President Clinton,
urging him "to enunciate a new strategy", namely "the removal of
Saddam Hussein's regime from power". If Clinton failed to act, "the
safety of American troops in the region, of our friends and allies like Israel
and the moderate Arab states, and a significant portion of the world's supply of
oil will all be put at hazard". They acknowledged that this doctrine would
be opposed, but "American policy cannot continue to be crippled by a
misguided insistence on unanimity in the UN Security Council".
Last year, the Sunday Herald obtained a copy of a
confidential report produced by the Project in September 2000, which suggested
that blatting Saddam was the beginning, not the end of its strategy. "While
the unresolved conflict with Iraq provides the immediate justification, the need
for a substantial American force presence in the Gulf transcends the issue of
the regime of Saddam Hussein." The wider strategic aim, it insisted, was
"maintaining global US pre-eminence".
Another document obtained by the Herald, written by Paul
Wolfowitz and Lewis Libby, called upon the US to "discourage advanced
industrial nations from challenging our leadership or even aspiring to a larger
regional or global role".
On taking power, the Bush administration was careful not to
alarm its allies. The new president spoke only of the need "to project our
strength with purpose and with humility" and "to find new ways to keep
the peace". From his first week in office, however, he began to engage not
so much in nation-building as in planet-building.
The ostensible purpose of Bush's missile defence programme
is to shoot down incoming nuclear missiles. The real purpose is to provide a
justification for the extraordinarily ambitious plans - contained in a Pentagon
document entitled Vision for 2020 - to turn space into a new theatre of war,
developing orbiting weapons systems that can instantly destroy any target
anywhere on Earth. By creating the impression that his programme is merely
defensive, Bush could justify a terrifying new means of acquiring what he calls
"full spectrum dominance" over planetary security.
Immediately after the attack on New York, the US government
began establishing "forward bases" in Asia. As the assistant secretary
of state, Elizabeth Jones, noted: "When the Afghan conflict is over we will
not leave Central Asia. We have long-term plans and interests in this
region." The US now has bases in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Uzbekistan,
Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgystan, Tajikistan and Georgia. Their presence has,
in effect, destroyed the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation which Russia and
China had established in an attempt to develop a regional alternative to US
power.
In January, the US moved into Djibouti, ostensibly to widen its war against terror, while accidentally gaining strategic control over the Bab al-Mandab - one of the world's two most important oil shipping lanes. It already controls the other one, the straits of Hormuz.
Two weeks ago, under the same pretext, it sent 3,000
soldiers to the Philippines. Last year it began negotiations to establish a
military base in Sao Tome and Principe, from which it can, if it chooses,
dominate West Africa's principal oilfields. By pure good fortune, the US
government now exercises strategic control over almost all the world's major oil
producing regions and oil transport corridors.
It has also used its national tragedy as an excuse for
developing new nuclear and biological weapons, while ripping up the global
treaties designed to contain them. All this is as the project prescribed. Among
other policies, it has called for the development of a new generation of
biological agents, which will attack people with particular genetic
characteristics.
Why do the supporters of this war find it so hard to see
what is happening? Why do the conservatives who go berserk when the European
Union tries to change the content of our chocolate bars look the other way when
the US seeks to reduce us to a vassal state? Why do the liberal interventionists
who fear that Saddam Hussein might one day deploy a weapon of mass destruction
refuse to see that George Bush is threatening to do just this against an
ever-growing number of states? Is it because they cannot face the scale of the
threat, and the scale of the resistance necessary to confront it? Is it because
these brave troopers cannot look the real terror in the eye?
Guardian Unlimited " Guardian Newspapers Limited 2003 ##
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