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All For Oil
By Bill Henderson
Al-Jazeerah, November 26, 2004
In a
well reasoned column World Policy Institute Senior Fellow Ian Bremmer
predicts that "the second Bush Administration will produce a foreign policy
based on a substantively different set of premises and policy options than
those we have seen over the past four years."
He argues convincingly that the cabinet war between the interventionist
neoconservatives (Wolfowitz and co) and the multilateralists (Powell) has
ended with both losing.
"Both groups have seen their policies discredited, and neither group
represents traditional Republican ideas about foreign policy."
Bremmer predicts that Bush will return to a traditional, much less
interventionist, Republican foreign policy. And he predicts that most
American troops will be pulled out of Iraq as soon as possible after the
Iraqi election.
In normal times you could put money on Mr Bremmer's learned predictions for
a presidential second term. But there is a momentous, sinister development
preoccupying the attention of those in power in Bush's government. Neocon
unilateralism and multilateralist construction of coalitions of the willing
are just two of differing tactical choices to confront an unprecedented
challenge to the US, to American values and the American way of life.
The war on terrorism? No.
In reasoned analysis of America's place in the world, of the American empire
and of the costs of empire, 9/11 was a bee sting: a mere three thousand
people in one awful attack by a very small number of suicidal terrorists.
Like the brutal beheadings now captured in gruesome video, terrorist
retaliation should be a sadly expected but ultimately very minor impediment
to the use of US power.
No, the momentous challenge facing the Bush Administration and America is
the very real danger to the continuing supply of America's very lifeblood:
oil.
Global oil production will peak (or has already possibly peaked) within
several decades. Already, growing oil demand - from China and India
especially, joining ever increasing American (20% of global demand) and
other developed world usage - has created a very tight market with a
doubling of price for benchmark crude oil. Some market analysts see US$100
oil in our immediate future and pessimists direly predict the mother of all
depressions, a new dark age and even human die-off as we go over the cliff
past Hubbert's Peak down the steep slopes of rapidly diminishing global oil
production.
Oil at US$100 would be bad for business. This is a specter to chill an
Administration trying to manage an indebted, precarious US economic hegemony
based upon a very vulnerable dollar. This ominous scenario is potentially
more devastating to Bush's America than a hundred 9/11s.
This is not taking into account the more pessimistic predictions of a more
rapidly declining oil supply leading past market dislocation to resource
wars and catastrophic societal disintegration for those who lose access to
oil.
The Bush Administration didn't attempt regime change in Iraq just to protect
America and its hegemony from the threat of WMDs and terrorism; it wasn't
entirely 'a
new crusade lead by geopolitical fantasists' against radical Islam and
in support of America's Middle East ally Israel; it didn't try to form a
coalition of the willing like in the first Gulf War just to confront Iraqi
aggression.
The permanent military bases and Pentagon sized American consul offices in
Iraq are being built because 60% of the world's crude comes from an
increasingly hostile Middle East, and this percentage of the supply of the
world's most valuable commodity will increase over the next decade, and
because control of Iraq is the decisive high ground for control of the
Middle East..
American troops are not in Iraq for ideological reasons; this is not a
replay of the domino theory in Vietnam. Whether or not the neocon dream of
nation building succeeds - emulating the success of American leadership in
postwar Japan and Germany - is secondary to continued American military
control of the key strategic area of the most important geo-strategic area
on the globe.
America has more than 800 military bases globally and awesome military
imperial power. Protection of American interests, especially American
business and the flow of commodities vital to America, is the US military
mandate. Given globalization and the building oil supply realities
traditional Republican isolationism is not even a consideration.
After the first Gulf War, then Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney agreed with
a traditional Republican foreign policy non-interventionist response to
Saddam's Iraq: The US and coalition did not push into Iraq initiating regime
change, occupation and nation building. They withdrew, banking upon military
and multilateral containment, and continuing US economic control of oil
supply (supported, of course, by a century old American military presence).
But by 1999 there was a new more pressing reality. In a
speech to Institute of Petroleum in November 1999 Dick Cheney showed a
keen appreciation of the building problem:
"For the world as a whole, oil companies are expected to keep finding and
developing enough oil to offset our seventy one million plus barrel a day of
oil depletion, but also to meet new demand. By some estimates there will be
an average of two per cent annual growth in global oil demand over the years
ahead along with conservatively a three per cent natural decline in
production from existing reserves. That means by 2010 we will need on the
order of an additional fifty million barrels a day. So where is the oil
going to come from? Governments and the national oil companies are obviously
controlling about ninety per cent of the assets. Oil remains fundamentally a
government business. While many regions of the world offer great oil
opportunities, the Middle East with two thirds of the world’s oil and the
lowest cost, is still where the prize ultimately lies..."
Access to oil is the IMPORTANT problem. And it is a US
government problem. At the beginning of Bush Jr's first Administration, long
before 9/11, Cheney was now a leading advocate of regime change. On
hindsight, Saddam's WMD threat and the war on terror were just inflated
excuses: optical, political practicalities to hide the real underlying
reasons for US actions.
The second term agenda will probably not include Iraq-style military
interventions in Iran or North Korea - a traditional non-interventionist
Republican foreign policy should probably be expected.
President Bush has already launched a fresh attack of invective upon North
Korea but, in all probability, this will remain the extent of his
Administrations action given no new Korean escalation.
Iran is a somewhat different Bush Administration challenge: increased US
military overextension is not practically possible for the moment, but Iran
is seemingly intent upon a nuclear deterrence for obvious reasons and is
building new oil and weapons contractual bridges with China.
But the large American military and governing presence is in Iraq to stay.
Conflict between America and the Islamic world will grow as the American
strategic policy in Iraq and of course, for the whole Middle East, is better
appreciated.
And American choice of what can only be perceived as a military grab-the-oil
policy path to the coming end of oil will no doubt engender responses,
unpredictable perhaps very surprising responses, from a new growing world
power, China, from a still nuclear armed Russia, and from the wider world
community who will become increasingly concerned about American leadership
and their own position within or without the military fortress controlling
access to oil.
Given the momentous problem of peak oil and the oil importance of the Middle
East and their first term choice of the grab-the-oil policy path, the second
Bush Administration has little choice but continuation of an aggressive,
interventionist, unilateralist foreign policy.
www.pacificfringe.net
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| Earth, a planet
hungry for peace |
Apartheid
Wall
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| The
Israeli Land-Grab Apartheid Wall built inside the Palestinian
territories, here separating Abu Dis from occupied East
Jerusalem. (IPC, 7/4/04). |
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| The Israeli
apartheid (security) wall around Palestinian population centers in
the West Bank, like a Python. (Alquds,10/25/03). |
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