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       War is the Climax of the American-Israeli

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       War is the Climax of the American-Israeli
amatullah
03/24/03 at 12:57:04
Here is an interesting and important article written by a prominent
British historian who has published extensively on the Middle East. He
examines in great detail the origins of plan to invade Iraq and examines
the ties to leading supporters of Israel who have long called for the
dismemberment of Iraq in order to ensure America's and Israel's
domination of the region.




       War is the Climax of the American-Israeli Partnership
       =====================================================


    By Patrick Seale, 21 March 2003
    Published in different Arab and foreign media
    [Patrick Seale is a distinguished British historian]

              "Blair  knows  that   Sharon,  who   has
              rubbished the Quartet's  'road-map'  and
              has devoted his life to the  achievement
              of a 'Greater Israel', has no  intention
              of allowing the emergence  of  a  viable
              Palestinian state. On the  contrary,  he
              is using  the  crisis  to  continue  his
              wholesale  destruction  of   Palestinian
              society."

    The United States has embarked on an imperial  adventure  in
    the Middle East. This is the true meaning of the war against
    Iraq. The war is not about the disarmament of Iraq. That was
    always a hollow and cynical pretext. No one  with  any  real
    knowledge of the situation believed that Iraq, on its  knees
    from two disastrous wars and from twelve years  of  punitive
    sanctions,  presented  any  sort  of  'imminent  threat'  to
    anyone. In any event, from the start of last  November  when
    UN  inspectors  returned  to  Iraq  under  Security  Council
    Resolution 1441, the Washington hawks wanted the  inspectors
    to fail and then  pressed  impatiently  for war,  just  when
    inspections showed real signs of progress.

    Nor is the war  only,  or  even  primarily,  about  toppling
    Saddam Hussein. Indeed the White  House  announced  that  US
    forces would enter Iraq whether  or  not  the  Iraqi  leader
    resigned and left the country. The war has bigger  aims:  it
    is about  the  implementation  of  a  vast  -  and  probably
    demented - strategic plan.

    Washington is intoxicated by the vision of  imposing  a  Pax
    Americana on the Arab world on the  model  of  the  imperial
    'order' which Britain imposed on the  entire  region  in  an
    earlier age -- with its Gulf and South Arabian strong points
    protecting the route to India, its occupation  of  Egypt  in
    1882, and then the extension of its  rule  after  the  First
    World War to some of the  Arab  provinces  of  the  defeated
    Ottoman Empire. The result was the  creation  under  British
    tutelage of Iraq, Palestine and Transjordan.

    America's imperial ambitions

    With bases across the region  from  Oman  to  Central  Asia,
    America is now seeking to recreate the British Empire at its
    apogee. The occupation of Iraq, a major Arab country at  the
    strategic heart of the region, will allow the United  States
    to control the resources of the Middle East and reshape  its
    geopolitics to its advantage  -  or  so  the  Anglo-American
    strategists hope. But if things go badly, history  may  well
    judge the war to be a  criminal  enterprise  -  unjustified,
    unprovoked, illegitimate, catastrophic for the Iraqi victims
    of  the  conflict  and   destructive   of   the   rules   of
    international relations as they have evolved over  the  past
    half century.

    The fatal flaw  is  that  this  is  not  a  purely  American
    project. Rather it  must  be  seen  as  the  culmination  of
    America's strategic partnership with Israel which  began  36
    years ago when, in 1967, President Charles  de  Gaulle  told
    Israel that it would lose French support if it attacked  its
    Arab neighbours. Israel  promptly  switched  its  attentions
    from Europe to the US, which  it  gradually  made  its  main
    external ally and subsidizer.  The  relationship  has  since
    grown more intimate with every passing year, to  the  extent
    that the tail now wags the dog.

    Much of the ideological justification and political pressure
    for war against  Iraq  has  come  from  right-wing  American
    Zionists, many of them  Jews,  closely  allied  to  Israel's
    Prime  Minister  Ariel  Sharon  and  occupying   influential
    positions both inside and outside the  Bush  administration.
    It is neither exaggeration, nor anti-Semitism, as they would
    have it, to say that this is a Bush-Sharon war against Iraq.

    As is now widely understood, the  genesis  of  the  idea  of
    occupying Iraq can be dated back to the  mid-1990s.  Richard
    Perle, chairman of the Pentagon's Defense Policy  Board  and
    often described as the  intellectual  driving  force  behind
    President Bush's world-view, has for years been pressing  US
    and Israeli leaders to go to war against  Iraq.  On  8  July
    1996, shortly after Benyamin  Netanyahu's  election  victory
    over Shimon Peres, Perle handed Netanyahu a  strategy  paper
    entitled 'A Clean Break: A New  Strategy  for  Securing  the
    Realm'. It called for the removal of Saddam Hussein as a key
    Israeli objective and as a means of weakening Syria.

    The call for an attack on Iraq was then taken up in 1997  by
    a right-wing American group called The  Project  for  a  New
    American Century  (PNAC),  whose  members  included  Richard
    Perle;  Deputy  Defense  Secretary  Paul  Wolfowitz;   Eliot
    Abrams, Middle East director  of  Bush's  National  Security
    Council; Randy Scheunemann, President of the  Committee  for
    the Liberation of Iraq;  and  two  influential  conservative
    editors, William Kristol of the Weekly Standard  and  Norman
    Podhoretz  of  Commentary.  With  friends  such  as  Defense
    Secretary Donald Rumsfled and  Vice-President  Dick  Cheney,
    and backed by half  a  dozen  right-wing  think-tanks,  this
    group formed a  formidable  pressure  group.  The  terrorist
    attacks on the United States of 11 September 2001 gave these
    advocates of American empire and of the US-Israeli  alliance
    their chance. They  were  able  to  make  the  inexperienced
    President  George  W  Bush,  who  came  to  power  after   a
    questionable election, the vehicle for their agenda.

    The result is the war we are now  witnessing.  The  ultimate
    objective is to  change  the  map  of  the  Middle  East  by
    destroying or intimidating all the enemies  of  the  US  and
    Israel. If America's imperium turns out  to  be  benevolent,
    which is most improbable, the Arabs  may  accept  it  for  a
    while. But they will always resist  Israel's  domination  of
    their region. That is the flaw in the project.

    Britain's Labour Prime Minister  Tony  Blair  is  a  strange
    bedfellow of these  right-wing  ideologues.  He  has  spoken
    passionately not only of the need to 'disarm Iraq' but  also
    of a two-state solution to the  Israeli-Palestine  conflict.
    He has castigated France for opposing the war and of thereby
    allegedly  missing  the  chance  of  promoting  Arab-Israeli
    peace. This is contorted and unconvincing logic.

    Blair knows that Sharon, who  has  rubbished  the  Quartet's
    'road-map' and has devoted his life to the achievement of  a
    'Greater Israel', has no intention of allowing the emergence
    of a viable Palestinian state. On the contrary, he is  using
    the  crisis  to  continue  his  wholesale   destruction   of
    Palestinian society. Blair  has  not  commented  on  the  80
    Palestinians Israel has killed,  and  the  hundreds  it  has
    wounded, in the first 18 days of  this  month,  nor  has  he
    spoken of the 48,000 Palestinian houses damaged or destroyed
    in the past 30 months. Blair has squandered a great deal  of
    his  integrity  in  order  to  protect  Britain's  so-called
    'special relationship' with Washington. But  if,  after  the
    war, attention turns to the Arab-Israeli conflict,  he  will
    find that Sharon has more influence in the American  capital
    than he has - in spite of the 45,000 British troops  he  has
    committed to battle. As evidence of this influence,  neither
    the White House nor  the  State  Department  has  chosen  to
    protest at the death of a  young  American  peace  activist,
    Rachel Corrie, crushed by an Israeli bulldozer in Gaza  this
    week as she tried to stop the demolition  of  a  Palestinian
    home.

    Will America's war meet resistance?

    The United  States  is  counting  on  a  swift,  successful,
    relatively 'clean' war in Iraq,  in  which  American  troops
    will be seen as liberators not occupiers. It intends to  buy
    goodwill  by  embarking  immediately  on  a   programme   of
    reconstruction of roads, power  plants,  hospitals,  schools
    and so forth. But who will pay for this reconstruction? Will
    it be money drawn from Iraq's oil revenues?  In  particular,
    will American companies, who intend  to  secure  the  lion's
    share of the contracts, be paid out of the UN escrow account
    established under  the  oil-for-food  programme?  This  will
    require a new Security Council Resolution. If France, Russia
    and China are cut out of the  reconstruction  contracts  and
    the oil concessions, they will undoubtedly  fight  any  such
    American monopoly. Some Western diplomats see  this  as  the
    next diplomatic battle.

    In this  war,  the  great  unanswered  question  is  whether
    American  and  British  troops   will   meet   any   serious
    resistance, not just from the elite units of the Iraqi  army
    but also from the civilian population. After the first flush
    of victory, will the occupying armies be  harassed  by  hit-
    and-run guerrillas, as happened to Israel after its invasion
    of Lebanon in 1982? Will an Iraqi 'Hizballah' emerge on  the
    model of the  resistance  movement  which  eventually  drove
    Israel  out  of  south  Lebanon?  A  successful   resistance
    movement needs outside support, a flow of  arms  and  money,
    safe havens when the going gets tough. In Lebanon, Hizballah
    had such support from Syria and Iran. In 1983, it was  Syria
    and  its  local  allies  that  managed  to  defeat  American
    attempts, brokered by George Shultz, then  US  Secretary  of
    State, to draw Lebanon into Israel's  sphere  of  influence.
    Who in the region  today  could  extend  help  to  an  Iraqi
    resistance movement? Syria has become too vulnerable to play
    any such role, Iran too fearful of being  the  next  target,
    Turkey  too  preoccupied  in  keeping  a  lid   on   Kurdish
    aspirations to statehood in northern Iraq. The  most  likely
    resistance might come from elsewhere. A non-state actor like
    Osama  bin  Laden's  Al-Qa'ida,  drawing   inspiration   and
    recruits from the  violent  anti-American  and  anti-Israeli
    sentiments now sweeping the Muslim world, might take up  the
    challenge. Occupation breeds insurrection. This is an  axiom
    of history.


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