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Bin Laden's aims with 9/11 and Bush's in Iraq:
Report expaining what bin Laden's aims were with 9/11, and what
G W Bush and the Cheney neo-cons hoped to achieve with the
invasion of Iraq. Ignorance about this is astounding - yet
knowing this is essential to understanding how GW Bush's push
for unipolarism and its failure lies at the root of both
America's international and financial disasters.
By John Pedler
| “I
kind of think that the decisions taken in the next
few weeks will determine the rest of the world for
years to come”, Prime Minister Tony Blair to
President G W Bush, 20 March 2003 as the Iraq war
began [as quoted in Plan of Attack, Bob Woodward
p399]. “An invasion of Iraq could turn the whole
region into a cauldron and thus destroy the ‘war on
terrorism’”, Brent Scowcroft, security adviser to
Republican presidents since Nixon, on TV on 4 August
2002 [John Prados, Hoodwinked, p1] |
09/09/08 "ICH"
-- - To a remarkable extent our world today results from the
Iraq war. So if we are to understand the international
challenges the next American president must face, we need first
to understand the genesis of the invasion. But there is still
astonishing confusion about the respective aims of Al Qaeda in
attacking the World Trade Center and of the US in its response.
Without the records of the White House and the Al Qaeda
leadership records, we have to piece together the known
positions of the two parties. When we do we find the logic
behind their actions.
What did Al Qaeda hope to get from ‘9/11’ in 2001? It was not a
‘Pearl Harbour’ (to weaken the enemy militarily prior to
inevitable war) but a provocation to bring about a typical
ill-considered disproportionately violent reaction from the US,
which would pit the US against the Muslim world – a ‘clash of
civilisations’ that would weaken the West, especially given its
dependence is on oil in Muslim majority countries. The loss of
one building, however prestigious, was not the loss of much of
the Pacific fleet altering the balance of forces at the start of
a war, but a deliberate taunting slap which could not be
ignored. ‘9/11’ was thus a ‘jujitsu’ ploy to use the opponent’s
own strength to bring about a fall.
Al Qaeda in effect sought to drive home Dr. Martin Luther King’s
remark about Vietnam: “The image of America will never again be
the image of revolutionary freedom, but the image of violence
and militarism.”
To weaken the West is the necessary step for ‘Al Qaeda & Co’ to
achieve a dominating position in the Middle East – with the
ultimate aim of establishing something like a new, extremist
‘Caliphate’ for the Muslim world. The prerequisite for that is
the collapse of the Saudi monarchy. This, with its oil and
guardianship of Islam’s most holy places, is therefore Al
Qaeda’s target for ‘regime change’, not the US. (Osama bin
Laden’s message of 29 December 2007 all but dismisses the US as
having “lost the war in Iraq” making plain that the Saudi
monarchy is the chief enemy). In other words Al Qaeda is out to
alter the balance of power to the detriment of the West so
enabling it to control Saudi oil and gain a dominating influence
in the Islamic ummah sufficient to alter the world order in
favour of its extreme version of Wahabism and its ambitious
geo-political aspirations for Islam. The empowerment of the Arab
world after the centuries of impotence. Not so unrealistic given
the precedent of defeat of the two superpowers – the US in
Vietnam and the USSR in Afghanistan.
Al Qaeda will surely have known of the long standing
neo-conservative calls for an invasion of Iraq, including those
of leading neo-conservatives holding key positions in the new G
W Bush Administration. So it is quite possible that it hoped the
expected American over-reaction to 9/11 would include an
invasion of Iraq. I myself was among the many Cassandras in 2002
who warned that nothing would help Al Qaeda more than an
invasion of Iraq without UN authorisation.
Inter alia, an American invasion of Iraq -
i) would remove Saddam Hussein, who was doing the West’s work
for it by blocking Al Qaeda and other Muslim extremists, his
principal ideological enemies - so opening in Iraq a second
front for Al Qaeda terrorism in the heart of the Middle East and
next door to Al Qaeda’s arch-enemy, the Saudi monarchy.
ii) would unleash Sunni/Shia/Kurd rivalry within Iraq
threatening its destabilisation,
iii) that in turn would lead to rivalry between Iraq’s
neighbours so helping destabilise the region, notably between
Shia Iran and the Sunni countries (Iran being Al Qaeda’s rival),
iv) such trouble in occupied Iraq would divert US resources from
Afghanistan, providing an opportunity for Taliban and Al Qaeda
resurgence,
v) would heighten the Christian v. Islam image of the ‘war on
terror’ (indeed G W Bush himself at first inadvisedly used the
term ‘crusade’).
The correct first response to Al Qaeda’s 9/11 provocation was
surely to target the Al Qaeda leadership, and to snuff out its
appeal. So any American President was virtually obliged, if
possible, to invade Afghanistan, to deny Al Qaeda its safe haven
(and attempt to destroy or capture its leadership). But, second,
this needed simultaneously to be accompanied by a consummate
initiative to resolve the Israel/Palestine problem – the major
immediate cause of Muslim resentment and thus of Al Qaeda’s key
source of its support, popularity, and recruitment. Never had
the prospects for a settlement been so favourable as in 2002
after 9/11 when world and so much Muslim opinion was so
supportive of the US. President G W Bush achieved the first with
near unanimous international support or at least tacit approval.
But he continued (until 2007) to turn his back on the second
instead of following up President Clinton’s determined but
failed attempt in 1999. Instead President Bush invaded Iraq and
his support unravelled.
Whether or not Al Qaeda hoped 9/11 would provoke an invasion of
Iraq, the invasion did lead to serious weakening of the US and
the West and to a general revulsion against the US or at least
against the Bush administration. And, with the neglect of
Afghansitan, it enabled Al Qaeda to achieve its relocation in
Pakistan and its near worldwide metastasisation. Pakistan itself
now appears to be Al Qaeda’s next target for destabilisation on
its the road to Saudi Arabia via a now critically destabilised
Middle East.
What did the ‘neo-conservatives’ advising Bush hope to achieve
by invading Iraq?
Many pundits see the invasion simply as a foolhardy diversion
from Afghanistan, many citing ‘oil’ as the primary reason. But
the popular denigration of the neo-conservatives as either
stupid or Israeli stooges, is far from correct. Neo-conservative
writings and remarks, e.g. in the Project for a New American
Century (PNAC), The Weekly Standard (owned by Rupert Murdoch)
and the statements of the neoconservatives in key posts the G W
Bush administration*, when put together, suggest there were some
eight apparently logical reasons for the invasion:
[* Vice President Cheney – a signatory of PNAC’s 1993 ‘Statement
of Principles’; ‘Scooter’ Libby his Chief of Staff; Defence
Secretary Rumsfeld; Paul Wolfwitz his Deputy; Richard Armitage,
Deputy Secretary of State; John Bolton, Under Secretary Arms
Control; Douglas Feith, Under Secretary, Defense Policy; Richard
Perle (‘Prince of Darkness’), Chair, Defense Policy Board,
Pentagon (who saw the fraudulent Ahmed Chalabi as Iraq’s new
leader); Zalmay Khalilzad (Wolfowitz protégé and leading neo-com
theorist born in Afghanistan and senior Muslim in the Bush
administration].
The PNAC had called for the overthrow of Saddam even before its
famous letter to President Clinton in 1998. Because of G W
Bush’s ignorance of foreign and defence matters the highly
experienced Dick Cheney was chosen as his running mate in 1999.
In the interim after the November election Cheney is reported to
have made all or most of the above appointments. America thus
had a remarkable team of idealist/realpolitik officials at the
top of the G W Bush administration should anything untoward
occur – or should anything happen to enable them to realise
their vision of the 21st century. This involved invading Iraq:
1. To overthrow Saddam Hussein, a hated dictator, winning
widespread kudos for the US from humanitarians and justifying
Bush’s doctrine of preventive war. Further interventions could
follow.
1. To eliminate any WMD Saddam might possess. This ‘soft target’
success for non proliferation would be a warning for North Korea
then the main WMD threat, and any others, like Iran, tempted to
acquire ‘the bomb’.
1. To secure supplies of Iraq’s oil – particularly given the
uncertainty of Saudi Arabia’s oil, given doubts about its long
term stability and its Wahabist religious ideology that had
spawned Al Qaeda.
1. To obtain permanent US bases in Iraq – denied by Saudi Arabia
- so achieving US military domination in the heart of the Middle
East.
1. To establish American style democracy in Iraq, the success of
which would come to be imitated by the countries of a ‘new
Middle East’.
1. To replace a hostile with a friendly Iraq, much improving
Israel’s security and its bargaining position with the
Palestinians, Syria and others.
1. To demonstrate by ‘shock and awe’ to all the world US
overwhelming military and economic might – its ability to go
anywhere, do anything, afford anything, so ensuring that the
21st would indeed be the New American Century: the key aim of
the neo-conservatives.
And added after 9/11:
1. To trump Al Qaeda in its Islamic heartland – effectively
ending its prestige and appeal and dashing its hopes of
re-making the Middle East in its own extreme Wahabist image. And
of course this prospect enabled the pro-war cabal at last to get
the green light for the invasion they had so long promoted.
How far even President Bush himself was fully aware of every
aspect of this beguiling scenario is uncertain. But in December
2002 [according to James Risen State of War p171], when asked if
there were a strategy to counter the growth of Islamic
extremism, Bush replied that “victory in Iraq would take care of
that.” Certainly Bush does appear to have seen “Iraq” as the
move that would make his presidency an outstanding and historic
success for the United States and for himself. Blair though, as
well as his stated conviction that Britain had to be close to
the US to have any hope of influence, seems genuinely to have
believed in intervention for humanitarian reasons. In both the
US and the UK there was thus that particularly American
‘exceptionalist’ mixture of idealism and realpolitik – more the
latter in the case of the US and more the former in the case of
the UK.
In sum, far from being a diversion from the ‘War on Terror’, the
invasion of Iraq would be the means of winning it.
Why did this so apparently well thought out plan go so
disastrously wrong? Basically – it is generally agreed - because
it did not take into account the historic fissiparous realities
either of Iraq or of the Middle East, nor of the likely
repercussions in the wider world. We know now [from e.g Sir C
Meyers’, then UK Ambassador in Washington, DC Confidential] that
Messrs Bush and Blair, preparing their rationale for war
self-secluded in the White House and No. 10 respectively,
ignored - even excluded - professional advice setting out the
dangers. Ross Carne (then in the Foreign office) describes how
warning after warning from Foreign Office experts was ignored.
The British had far more realistic knowledge of Iraq and the
Middle East generally than the US – notably deriving from
Britain’s invasion during World War I and the monitory story of
its subsequent League of Nations mandate. And it is becoming
increasingly clear that not just diplomats, but top brass in
both US and UK were privately voicing their considerable doubts.
In the autumn of 2002 a DIA memo warned that a post war Iraq
would be “highly complex and driven by political and religious
factions”. The US occupiers would be “hard pressed to keep the
lid on… there would be an influx of Islamic fighters”. A State
Department analysis gave reasons why “a liberal democracy would
be hard to achieve in Iraq”. Nevertheless on 26 February 2003
President Bush confidently repeated his claim that “bringing
democracy to Iraq would ‘democratise’ the other Arab countries.
Yet the many outside Cassandras warning of disaster not only in
Iraq but worldwide ranged from Brent Scowcroft down to many
lesser professional observers with a lifetime in diplomacy like
myself. In his speech on 17 March 2003 Robin Cook, Britain’s
former foreign minister, pleaded for multilateralism warning
that without widespread approval the US would risk squandering
the world sympathy expressed after ‘9/11’ - so making
suppression of international terrorism harder to achieve. On 30
September 2002 Republican Senator Chuck Hagel made a prescient
speech at the Eisenhower Institute insisting that Iraq “not be
viewed in a vacuum”, it required a multilateral “comprehensive
strategy for peace” inter alia including moves to resolve the
Israel/Palestine problem and maintaining the priority for
Afghanistan.
And of course by October 2002 it had become clear, even to the
general public, that both the British and American governments
were ‘massaging’ the intelligence to make their case for war.
Those qualified to judge were satisfied there was no truth in
the remarkably effective scare mongering claims that Iraq had or
was near obtaining nuclear weapons, and that Saddam Hussein was
in cahoots with Al Qaeda (as suggested by Vice President Cheney
– an obvious gross misperception that somehow still persists in
the US).
Another reason was political – both Bush and Blair assessed that
the war on Iraq had to be presented as low key and as low cost
as possible if they were to get the votes for war that they
needed. That meant adopting the Rumsfeld ‘lite’ invasion force
(despite General Eric Shinseki’s warning to Congress in February
2003 that a force of ‘hundreds of thousands’ would be needed to
secure an occupation of Iraq). The US budgeted only $50-80bn
making no provision for vastly increased costs should things not
go as hoped (today direct costs are around $500bn and fiscal
experts now place the eventual overall costs as likely to prove
as high as $1-3 trn).
To win the needed political backing in both countries, the US
and UK publics had not be asked to make any sacrifices. This did
not stop the remarkable so called ‘march of the million’
anti-war protesters through London which would appear to have
expressed not just majority opinion in the UK, but also in all
of Europe. Blair and a majority of both Labour and Conservative
Members of Parliament simply ignored this.
This minimalism contributed to the failure of both the US
presidential and the UK parliamentary forms of democracy when,
ironically, both the US and the UK were about to use force to
impose ‘democracy’ on Iraq. Neither the opposition Democrats in
the US nor the Conservatives in the UK took the trouble to
perform their duty of opposition – to probe fully the viability
of government policies and the likely true cost in blood,
treasure, and severe international repercussions. Yet the truth
was readily available to lawmakers. But several senators
(famously including Mrs. Clinton) did not read the secret
documents prepared for them in the Senate library. In the UK Ian
Duncan Smith – appointed Conservative opposition leader almost
simultaneously with the destruction of the World Trade Center -
was an honourable ex-Guards officer who appears simply to have
taken the word of the British Prime Minister when given a top
secret briefing by Mr. Blair.
So, many left leaning Democrats and right leaning Conservatives
voted approving their Republican and Labour governments’
respective call for a ‘cheap, quick’ war without performing
their opposition duty to examine and, if need be, challenge
proposed policy. On the Iraq Resolution of 11 October 2002 the
Senate voted 77 - 23. On the Declaration of War Amendment of 18
March 2003 the House of Commons voted 396 - 217.
Yet the military and financial demands for simultaneously
securing Afghanistan, and invading of Iraq without adequate
resources was clearly high risk (‘reckless’ UK cabinet minister
Clare Short dubbed it) – and unrealistically dependent for
success on the intelligence being correct of such suspect
sources as Ahmed Chalabi that the invaders and occupiers would
be welcomed as liberators. These miscalculations (despite CIA
and State Department warnings) were compounded with the virtual
absence of planning for the occupation (despite British disquiet
and the State Department’s Future of Iraq project). On top of
this came the subsequent gross errors of dismantling key Iraqi
state institutions and ‘de-Ba’athification’ extending far
further down than denazification in Germany or similar
‘cleansing’ in Japan in 1945. The disbanding of the Iraqi army
and the failure to secure Iraq’s conventional weapons led, as
predicted, to unemployed disgruntled well-armed soldiers with
every reason to revolt, backing factions of their choice.
Had an invasion and occupation been properly planned and had it
enjoyed the widest possible international approval, the outcome
and the worldwide repercussions would have been very different.
But neither the Administration, nor the neo-conservatives
(including Vice President Cheney) wanted such foreign
involvement diluting American control of a venture the
over-arching purpose of which was to ensure a unipolar New
American Century: anathema to Russia, China, and many other
countries. Hence President G W Bush’s initial reluctance to go
to the United Nations.
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