Why Bush Smiles: Victory is at Hand in Iraq
By Chris Floyd
10/17/06 "Information
Clearing House" --
-- Despite George W. Bush's
ostentatious bucking up of the Iraqi government yesterday,
it is very likely that there will indeed be an
American-engineered coup ousting Maliki and installing some sort
of strongman-led
"national unity government" in Baghdad soon, probably before
the end of the year.
(Indeed, the very
showiness of Bush's pledge of support – in a phone call
supposedly initiated by Bush, then announced to the media – is a
good indication of the decapitation to come. As JFK once told
Gore Vidal: "When a politician says to you, 'Jack, if there's
anything I can do for you, just let me know,' that means you're
dead." And Maliki – installed in a Bush-backed internal party
coup that toppled the previous prime minister, Ibrahim al-Jaafari,
who was himself once a recipient of similar pledges of staunch
White House support – is a dead man walking.)
The chief reason why
Maliki and his government will be ousted is not the
hell-storm of death and violence that is now devouring the
country. The fact that every new day sees a hundred or more
mutilated bodies dumped on the nation's streets, and
pitched battles between sectarian militias, and multiple
deaths of American troops, and
mass flights of anguished Iraqi civilians running
in fear for their lives is not a matter of any urgent
concern to Bush and his warmakers. Indeed, there is much
evidence that one of the prime instigators of the wanton killing
is a group created and long nurtured by the Bush Administration
itself: the Facilities Protection Service, an army of uniformed
freebooters nearly 150,000 strong. (I'll be writing more on this
later.) Of course, the violence is a
political headache for
the Bushists, because it generates bad press; but they don't
care about it – it has
no intrinsic meaning or emotional impact on those who are
already responsible for
the deaths of more than half a million Iraqis and more than
2,700 Americans.
No, what will likely
bring on the coup is the December deadline for crafting a new
oil law, which was imposed on Iraq by the International Monetary
Fund, as part of the deal to write off some – but by no means
all – of the nation's crushing debt. Given the current level of
intense anti-American feeling in Iraq, and the overwhelming
majority support among every sector of society for ending the
occupation, and the overwhelming belief among Iraqis that the
chief reason behind the invasion was to steal their oil, it is
almost inconceivable that Maliki will be able to sign the new
law, which essentially opens up Iraq's oil wealth to decades of
despoliation by U.S. and European energy conglomerates. The
Maliki government – already weak, incompetent and despised, as
are all puppet regimes – could not possibly survive the
political backlash that such a move would provoke.
Therefore, Maliki
will either refuse to sign the law – in which case he would
doubtless be removed immediately one way or another; perhaps
even by some act of "terrorist violence" – or else he will seek
to postpone the deadline and buy himself a little more time. If
it's the latter case, then he and his government might last out
the year after all, assuming the Potomac Potentate deigns to
extend his temporary mercy. But sooner or later the law
will be signed: it is
the reason for the war, it is why all of these people have died,
it is the sign and substance of the true victory that Bush has
been working for all these years.
Indeed, once it is
signed, we may in fact see a partial withdrawal of occupation
troops begin, under the cover of
the recommendations of the "bipartisan" panel headed by Bush
Family consigliere James Baker. It will look like Bush has
finally "listened to reason," that he has wisely "changed
course;" but if it happens, it will only be because he has
gotten what he came for: crony control of Iraq's vast oil
reserves. Baker meanwhile will have accomplished his own
multi-faceted mission: keeping Iraq in IMF bondage by holding
the whip of the remaining debt over its head, while
simultaneously ensuring that Iraq continues its onerous,
back-breaking payments of arrears and "reparations" to Baker's
private lobbying clients (and longtime Bush Family business
partners), the Saudi and Kuwaiti royals.
For as Joshua Holland
of Alternet.com points out, the new Iraqi oil law will lock in
succeeding governments, while the "sovereign debt" will also
stay on the books no matter what kind of state follows the
inevitable demise of the puppet regime installed by Bush.
Holland has laid out the details of this remarkable – yet almost
unremarked – situation in two excellent articles:
Bush's Petro-Cartel Almost Has Iraq's Oil and
The U.S. Takeover of Iraqi Oil. I've been writing piecemeal
about many of these issues for years, (e.g.,
Dubya Indemnity: Bush Barons Beyond the Reach of Law), but
Holland has provided a succinct yet in-depth overview, drawing
on his own research and interviews with some of the leading
muckrakers of Bush's war-profiteering bloodbath. He is
especially good on the backstory of the debt deal, another
unheralded "victory" by the Bush Faction.
Yes, victory. You
wonder why Bush and his minions maintain the seemingly
irrational belief that "things are going well" in Iraq, that
"we're making progress," etc.? That's because things
are going well in the
war they are fighting: the war for money and power. What happens
to the human beings caught up in this war – Iraqi civilians, or
American citizens at ever-greater risk from the terrorism
spawned by the war – is, again, no concern of the Bush gang. In
fact, the worse things are from that standpoint, the better it
is for the Bushists. The war profits (and stolen swag) they and
their corporate cronies have accrued from the Iraq War (and the
"War on Terror" as well) have given them unimaginable wealth
with which to continue their overall dominance of American
society – no matter who wins the elections in 2006 or 2008, or
for decades beyond. As I've stated often before, no matter what
happens,
Bush and his cronies have already won the war.
They've won even if
Iraq collapses into perpetual anarchy, or becomes an extremist
religious state; they've won even if the whole region goes up in
flames, and terrorism flares to unprecedented heights – because
this will just mean more war-profiteering, more
fear-profiteering. And yes, they've won even if they lose their
majority next month or the presidency in 2008, because war and
fear will still fill their coffers, buying them continuing
influence and power as they bide their time through another
interregnum of a Democratic "centrist" – who will, at best, only
nibble at the edges of the militarist state – until they are
back in the saddle again. The only way they can lose the Iraq
War is if they are actually arrested and imprisoned for their
war crimes. And you know and I know that's not going to happen.
So that confident
strut of the Bush gang, their incessant upbeat pronouncements
about the war, their complacent smirks, their callous
indifference to the unspeakable horror they have unleashed upon
the world – these are not the hallmarks of self-delusion, or
wilful ignorance, or a disassociation from reality. They know
full well what the reality is – and they like it.
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