Vision Quest
By Chris Floyd
03/31/06 "Moscow
Times" -- -- Once again we must take up the
cudgels for President George W. Bush, who is being increasingly
maligned for his alleged lack of strategic vision in Iraq. This
chorus of petty carping from partisan dead-enders has been
exacerbated of late by all the hand-wringing media reports about
"civil war" breaking out among the ungrateful beneficiaries of
the president's selfless crusade for peace and enlightenment in
the Middle East.
These charges are, as always, pure bunkum. As we have often
noted here before, Bush is pursuing a remarkably effective
"win-win" strategy in Iraq, a highly flexible vision that is
even now ripening to fruition. The savage militias, ethnic
cleansing, mass murder, sectarian hatred and gruesome tortures
that are turning Iraq into a howling moonscape of fear and chaos
are but precision tools in the artful hands of the Leader, as he
patiently crafts the ultimate victory.
The war aims of the Babylonian Conquest have always been obvious
to anyone who concentrates on the operational reality of the
action, ignoring the ludicrous cornball about democracy and
security that Bush dishes out to gull the rubes back home. The
reality clearly shows that Bush had three primary objectives in
launching the invasion. First and foremost was the transfer of
large portions of the national wealth of Iraq -- and the United
States -- into the coffers of his political cronies, corporate
backers and family members. Second was the frantic acceleration
of the long-running, bipartisan militarization of America, which
is now almost wholly dependent on war and rumors of war to keep
its heavily mortgaged economy afloat. Third was planting a
permanent military presence in Iraq to "project dominance" over
the strategic oil lands and serve as staging areas for further
operations in regime change and political extortion as needed.
("Nice little country you got there, Abdul; too bad if
something, like, happened to it -- you savvy? Now howzabout
signing that free trade agreement already?")
None of these aims have been harmed in the slightest by Iraq's
death spiral into civil war. The Bush faction's war profiteering
and fraud -- on a scale surpassing anything ever seen in world
history -- has fueled a ruthless political machine that, despite
its growing unpopularity with the U.S. people, now controls all
three branches of government and has overthrown the
Constitution, openly declaring that its leader is beyond the
reach of "judicial review, congressional oversight or
international law," as The Washington Post reported, rather
belatedly, this week. Swollen by the swag of aggressive war, the
elite interests represented by the Bush regime -- oil,
military-related industries and predatory venture capitalists
like the Carlyle Group -- have had their already inordinate sway
over American society and policy increased by several
magnitudes. They will remain ascendant for decades to come, no
matter what happens in Iraq, or in any U.S. election.
Indeed, the murderous chaos that will inevitably spill across
the region, and the world, from the collapse of Iraq will only
mean more boffo box office for the fearmongers and warmongers of
the Bush faction -- and even greater feasting for their oil
barons, already gorged on record-breaking profits after just
three years of bloodshed. The whack-a-mole "Long War" gleefully
envisioned by the Pentagon will thus be extended indefinitely,
bringing more militarization, more draconian "war powers," and
further destruction of those pesky civil rights and
constitutional liberties that hinder the elites in their
exercise of raw power.
Civil war also enhances the prospect of permanent U.S. bases.
The Sunni minority, once the most vociferous opponents of
American occupation, now look -- vainly -- to U.S. forces as
their last-ditch protection against the deadly militias of the
Shiite majority. The Shiite-led government relies on U.S.
military might to prop up its rickety state system. The Kurds
(who are busy ethnically cleansing their own enclave, as The
Washington Post reports, and imprisoning people for criticizing
the corruption of Kurdish leaders, as The New York Times
reports) are happy for the Americans to plant vast, minatory
fortresses down south to keep the troublesome Arabs in line. And
so the permanent bases are being sunk deep into Iraqi soil; the
Pentagon has already "authorized or proposed almost $1 billion"
for bases in 2005-06, The Associated Press reports.
And if Iraq cracks apart completely -- the "three-state
solution" proposed by Leslie Gelb, doyen of that bastion of
bipartisan Establishment wisdom, the Council on Foreign
Relations -- why, so much the better. It will be much easier to
wangle basing agreements, oil deals, insider investments and
those all-important arms contracts out of weakened mini-states
struggling for survival than from a strong, unified nation
looking out for its own interests.
As the gates of hell blow open in Iraq, the marvelous
adaptability of Bush's strategy becomes apparent. When the
promised "cakewalk" did not materialize, Bush shifted to the
near-genocidal fury of the Fallujah assault and the systematic
tortures of Abu Ghraib. When these tactics failed to quell the
resistance, Bush gave the Pentagon the greenlight to arm,
infiltrate and manipulate militias and terrorist groups, even to
the point of goading them into action, The New Yorker reports.
If you can't have cake, then chaos might serve your turn just as
well.
Civil war looks like a profitable gambit for now -- except for
all the pointless suffering, of course. But Bush has never cared
about that. A true visionary, he keeps his eyes on the prize, on
the only kind of "victory" he has ever sought in Iraq: loot and
domination for his ruthless clique. Whatever happens next,
they've already won.
Annotations
'If You Start Looking at Them as Humans, How Are You Gonna Kill
Them?'
The Guardian, 29 March, 2006
Fear Up Harsh: The Iraqi Civil War in Context
Empire Burlesque, March 28, 2006
Opening Statement of Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz
House Armed Services Committee, Aug. 10, 2004
Testimony on Denying Terrorist Sanctuaries: Wolfowitz, Pace,
Brown
U.S. Department of Defense, Aug. 10, 2004
Pentagon granted authority to pay, equip foreign forces
Los Angeles Times, Oct. 30, 2004
Seymour Hersh: The Coming Wars
The New Yorker, Jan. 17, 2005
The Salvador Option
Newsweek, Jan. 14, 2005
Leslie Gelb: The Three-State Solution
New York Times, Nov. 25, 2003
Children of Abraham: Death in the Desert
Empire Burlesque, March 19/27, 2006
Redirecting Bullets in Baghdad
New York Times, March 26, 2006
Bound, Blindfolded and Dead: The Face of Atrocity in Baghdad
New York Times, March 25, 2006
Court Case Challenges Power of President
Washington Post, March 26, 2006
Civil War? What Civil War?
Salon.com, March 23, 2006
A Government with No Military and No Territory
TomDispatch.com, March 9, 2006
The Battle for Baghdad 'Has Already Started'
The Independent, March 25, 2006
30 Beheaded Bodies Found; Iraqi Death Squads Blamed
New York Times, March 27, 2006
Extended presence of U.S. in Iraq looms large
Associated Press, March 21, 2006
The Supplemental Pentagon Spending Bill: Eternal Funding for a
Never-Ending War
CounterPunch, March 27, 2006
Bush Was Set on Path to War, Memo to British Adviser Says
New York Times, March 27, 2006
Kurdish Officials Sanction Abductions in Kirkuk
Washington Post, June 15, 2005
US audit finds 'spectacular' waste of funds in Iraq
Christian Science Monitor, Jan. 27, 2006
Free Press Stumbles in Kurdistan
Los Angeles Times, March 27, 2006
Death squads operated from inside Iraqi government, officials
say
Knight-Ridder, March 12, 2006
What Bush was Told About Iraq
National Journal, March 2, 2006
Iraq's death squads: On the brink of civil war
The Independent, Feb. 26, 2006
Cry Havoc: Bush's Own Personal Janjaweed
Empire Burlesque, Aug. 27, 2004
Darkness Visible: The Pentagon Plan to Foment Terrorism is Now
in Operation
Empire Burlesque, Jan. 25, 2005
Into the Dark: The Pentagon Plan to Foment Terrorism
Empire Burlesque, Nov. 1, 2002
Requests for Iraqi Base Funding Make Some Wary of Extended Stay
Los Angeles Times, March 24, 2006
Abizaid says U.S. may want to keep bases in Iraq
Reuters, March 15, 2006
Hillary Clinton, War Goddess
Antiwar.com, Jan. 23, 2006
Cost of Rebuilding Shifts to Iraqis
USA Today, March 24, 2006
US Has "Black" Torture Chamber in Iraq
Deep Blade Journal, March 19, 2006
U.S. Plans New Bases in the Middle East
Washington Post, March 22, 2006
How Abu Ghraib Lives On
Time, March 6, 2006
Ring of Fire: The Fallujah Inferno
Empire Burlesque, Nov. 19, 2004
CIA Vet: Proof Bush Deceived America on War
TomPaine.com, Jan. 13, 2006
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