Murder And Mayhem In The Middle East
Why it matters to those living in the West
By Chris Martenson
December 06, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "PP"
- To understand what’s happening in Syria right now,
you have to understand the tactics and motivations of the US and
NATO -- parties sharing interwoven aims and goals in the Middle
East/North African (MENA) region.While
the populations of Europe and the US are fed raw propaganda
about the regional aims involved, the reality is far different.
Where the propaganda claims that various bad
dictators have to be taken out, or that democracy is the goal,
neither have anything at all to do with what’s actually
happening or has happened in the region.
For starters, we all know that if oil fields
were not at stake then the West would care much much less about
MENA affairs.
But a lot of outside interests do care. And
their aims certainly and largely include controlling the
region’s critical energy resources. There’s a lot of concern
over whether Russia or China will instead come to dominate these
last, best oil reserves on the planet.
Further, we can dispense with the idea that
the US and NATO have any interest at all in human rights in this
story. If they did, then they’d at least have to admit that
their strategies and tactics have unleashed immeasurable
suffering, as well as created the conditions for lots more. But
it would be silly to try and argue about or understand regional
motivations through the lenses of human rights or civilian
freedoms -- as neither applies here.
Divide And Conquer
Instead, the policies in the MENA region are
rooted in fracturing the region so that it will be easier to
control.
That’s a very old tactic; first utilized to a
great extent by Britain starting back in the 1700s.
Divide and conquer. There’s a reason that’s a
well-worn catch phrase: it’s hundreds of years old.
But to get a handle on the level of depravity
involved, I think it useful to examine what happened in Libya in
2011 when NATO took out Muamar Gaddafi and left the country a
broken shell -- as was intended.
I cannot really give you a good reason for
NATO involving itself in taking out Gaddafi. I only have bad
ones.
The official reason was that after the Arab
Spring uprising in Libya in early 2011 (with plenty of evidence
of Western influences in fanning those flames) things got ugly
and protesters were shot. This allowed the UN to declare that it
needed to protect civilians, and the ICC to charge Gaddafi with
crimes against humanity, declaring that he needed to stand
trial.
Here’s how it went down:
On 27 June, the ICC issued arrest warrants
for Gaddafi, his son Saif al-Islam, and his brother-in-law Abdullah
Senussi, head of state security, for charges concerning
crimes against humanity.[268] Libyan
officials rejected the ICC, claiming that it had "no
legitimacy whatsoever" and highlighting that "all of its
activities are directed at African leaders".[269]
That month, Amnesty
International published their findings, in which they
asserted that many of the accusations of mass human rights
abuses made against Gaddafist forces lacked credible
evidence, and were instead fabrications of the
rebel forces which had been readily adopted by the western
media.
(Source)
After the ICC's indictment, it was a hop, skip
and a jump to declaring a NATO-enforced ‘no fly zone’ over Libya
to protect civilians.
From there it was just a straight jump to NATO
actively shooting anything related to the Gaddafi government.
NATO had thereby chosen sides and was directly supporting the
rebellion.
The pattern in play here is always the same:
cherry-picked events are used as a pretext to support the side
seeking to topple the existing government and thereby leave a
sectarian wasteland to flourish in the inevitable power vacuum.
If you are like most people in the West, you
know almost nothing of any of this context. It’s not well
reported. And Libya is rarely in the news even though it's going
through increasingly desperate times.
I found a speech given by Gaddafi a few months
before he was killed to be especially compelling and revealing.
I will reproduce it in its entirety here:
For 40 years, or was it longer, I can't
remember, I did all I could to give people houses,
hospitals, schools, and when they were hungry, I gave them
food. I even made Benghazi into farmland from the desert, I
stood up to attacks from that cowboy Reagan, when he killed
my adopted orphaned daughter, he was trying to kill me,
instead he killed that poor innocent child. Then I helped my
brothers and sisters from Africa with money for the African
Union.
I did all I could to help people
understand the concept of real democracy, where people's
committees ran our country. But that was never enough, as
some told me, even people who had 10 room homes, new suits
and furniture, were never satisfied, as selfish as they were
they wanted more. They told Americans and other visitors,
that they needed "democracy" and "freedom" never realizing
it was a cut throat system, where the biggest dog eats the
rest, but they were enchanted with those words, never
realizing that in America, there was no free medicine, no
free hospitals, no free housing, no free education and no
free food, except when people had to beg or go to long lines
to get soup.
No, no matter what I did, it was never
enough for some, but for others, they knew I was the son of
Gamal Abdel Nasser, the only true Arab and Muslim leader
we've had since Salah-al-Deen, when he claimed the Suez
Canal for his people, as I claimed Libya, for my people, it
was his footsteps I tried to follow, to keep my people free
from colonial domination - from thieves who would steal from
us.
Now, I am under attack by the biggest
force in military history, my little African son, Obama
wants to kill me, to take away the freedom of our country,
to take away our free housing, our free medicine, our free
education, our free food, and replace it with American style
thievery, called "capitalism," but all of us in the Third
World know what that means, it means corporations run the
countries, run the world, and the people suffer. So, there
is no alternative for me, I must make my stand, and if Allah
wishes, I shall die by following His path, the path that has
made our country rich with farmland, with food and health,
and even allowed us to help our African and Arab brothers
and sisters to work here with us, in the Libyan Jamahiriya.
I do not wish to die, but if it comes to
that, to save this land, my people, all the thousands who
are all my children, then so be it.
Let this testament be my voice to the
world, that I stood up to crusader attacks of NATO, stood up
to cruelty, stood up to betrayal, stood up to the West and
its colonialist ambitions, and that I stood with my African
brothers, my true Arab and Muslim brothers, as a beacon of
light. When others were building castles, I lived in a
modest house, and in a tent. I never forgot my youth in
Sirte, I did not spend our national treasury foolishly, and
like Salah-al-Deen, our great Muslim leader, who rescued
Jerusalem for Islam, I took little for myself...
In the West, some have called me "mad",
"crazy", but they know the truth yet continue to lie, they
know that our land is independent and free, not in the
colonial grip, that my vision, my path, is, and has been
clear and for my people and that I will fight to my last
breath to keep us free, may Allah almighty help us to remain
faithful and free.
(Source)
Gaddafi’s great crime seems to be giving away
too much oil wealth to his people. Was he a strongman? Yes, but
you have to be to rule in that region right now. Was he the
worst strong man? No, not by a long shot.
As bad as he was, at least he didn’t kill a
million Iraqis on trumped up charges of non-existent weapons of
mass destruction. Nor was he chopping off 50 heads per week and
stoning females for adultery as is the case with Saudi Arabia
right now.
But again, whether he killed protestors or
not, or committed war crimes or not, is irrelevant to the power
structure. What mattered was that he had locked out Western
interests, and instead used his country's oil wealth to provide
free or extremely cheap health care, education and housing to a
wide swath of Libyans.
So let’s cut to the murder scene. Here’s how
it went down:
At around 08:30 local time on 20 October,
Gaddafi, his army chief Abu-Bakr Yunis Jabr, his security
chief Mansour Dhao, and a group of loyalists attempted to
escape in a convoy of 75 vehicles.[7][8] A Royal
Air Force reconnaissance aircraft spotted
the convoy moving at high speed, after NATO
forces intercepted a satellite phone call made by Gaddafi.[9]
NATO aircraft
then fired on 11 of the vehicles, destroying one. A
U.S. Predator drone operated
from a base near Las Vegas[8] fired
the first missiles at the convoy, hitting its target about 3
kilometres (2 mi) west of Sirte. Moments later, French
Air Force Rafale fighter
jets continued the bombing.[10]
The NATO bombing immobilized much
of the convoy and killed dozens of loyalist fighters.
Following the first strike, some 20 vehicles broke away from
the main group and continued moving south. A second NATO
airstrike damaged or destroyed 10 of these vehicles.
According to the Financial Times, Free Libya units
on the ground also struck the convoy.[11]
According to their statement, NATO
was not aware at the time of the strike that Gaddafi was in
the convoy. NATO
stated that in accordance with Security
Council Resolution 1973, it does not target individuals but
only military assets that pose a threat. NATO later
learned, "from open sources and Allied intelligence," that
Gaddafi was in the convoy and that the strike likely
contributed to his capture.[11]
(Source)
To believe NATO, it had no idea Gaddafi was in
that convoy (honest!), but just managed to have a
Predator drone handy as well as a large number of jets armed for
ground targets (not anti-aircraft missiles, as a no-fly zone
might imply). It merely struck all of these vehicles over and
over again in their quest to kill everyone on board because they
were “military assets that posed a threat.”
Because you live in the real world, you know
that NATO knew exactly where Gaddafi was at all times and that
he was in that convoy attempting to escape NATO's bombing raid.
Further, you won’t be surprised to learn that many of these
vehicles were pickup trucks that really posed no military threat
to NATO. The point was to kill Gaddafi, and numerous resources
were brought to bear on that mission.
Gaddafi’s killing was the assassination of a
foreign leader by Western interests. In this case, Gaddafi was
just yet another target in a long line of leaders that attempted
to keep those same interests at bay.
After NATO was finished making a mess of Libya
by taking out Gaddafi and leaving a right proper mess of a power
vacuum, it simply departed -- leaving the country to fend for
itself. Libya descended, of course, into an outright civil war
and has remained ever since a hotbed of sectarian violence and
increasing ISIS control and presence.
If NATO/US had to follow the Pier I rule of
“you break it, you buy it” they would still be in Libya offering
money and assistance as the country settles down and begins the
long process of rebuilding.
But no such luck. That’s absolutely not how
they operate. It’s disaster capitalism in action. The idea is to
break things apart and then make money off of the pieces. It's
not to help people.
Otherwise, how do we explain these images?

While imperfect by many standards, all of
these countries were stable and increasingly prosperous before
outside interests came in and turned them into a living
nightmare.
It is this context that explains why such
reactionary and violent groups as ISIS arose. They are the
natural response of violated people seeking to assert some
control over lives that otherwise have no hope and even less
meaning.
I’m not justifying ISIS; only explaining the
context that led to its rise.
Speaking of which, let’s turn back to Libya:
ISIS is tightening its grip in
Libya
Nov 15, 2015
GENEVA (Reuters) - Islamic State
militants have consolidated control over central Libya,
carrying out summary executions, beheadings and amputations,
the United Nations said on Monday in a
further illustration of the North African state's
descent into anarchy.
All sides in Libya's multiple
armed conflicts are committing breaches of international law
that may amount to war crimes, including abductions, torture
and the killing of civilians,
according to a U.N. report.
Islamic State (IS) has gained
control over swathes of territory, "committing gross abuses
including public summary executions of individuals based on
their religion or political allegiance",
the joint report by the U.N. High Commissioner for Human
Rights and the U.N. Support Mission in Libya said.
The U.N. had documented IS executions in
their stronghold city of Sirte, in central Libya along the
Mediterranean coast, and in Derna to the east, from which
they were later ousted by local militias. Victims included
Egyptian Copts, Ethiopians, Eritreans and a South Sudanese,
the report said.
Some were accused of "treason",
others of same-sex relations, but none were given due legal
process, according to the
report, which covered the year through October.
Four years after the overthrow of
Muammar Gaddafi, Libya is locked in a conflict between two
rival governments - an
official one in the east and a self-declared one controlling
the capital Tripoli - and the many armed factions that back
them.
(Source)
After that atrocious summary, how bad does
life under Gaddafi sound now? Again, he was targeted for
execution by Western interests and the resulting mess is of
little surprise to anybody with even modest curiosity about how
violent overthrows tend to work out in the MENA region.
But where is the UN security council
denouncing the war crimes? And where is the ICC leveling crimes
against humanity charges? Nowhere. There’s no more Western
political interest in Libya now that it has been broken apart.
As they say in the military: once is bad luck,
twice is a coincidence, but three times is enemy action. This
pattern of eliminating “a very bad man” and leaving the country
in a complete mess has happened three times of late, with Syria
targeted to be the fourth. So enemy action it is.
ISIS and other extreme jihadist groups arose
because of brutal conditions that made such harsh
interpretations of ancient religious texts make sense by
comparison. When you have nothing left to believe in, one’s
belief system can compensate by becoming rather inflexible.
I know I have greatly simplified a terribly
complex dynamic, but -- speaking of beliefs -- I don’t believe
that terrorists are born, I believe they are raised. When one
has nothing left to lose, then anything becomes possible,
including strapping on a suicide belt and flicking the switch.
What I am saying is that this is not a battle
between Christians and Muslims, nor is it a battle between good
and evil, both characterizations that I’ve read recently in
great abundance. That’s all nonsense for the masses.
This is about resources and true wealth that
is being siphoned from the people who have had the misfortune to
be born on top of it, and towards other regions with greater
power and reach.
There’s nothing different in what I am reading
today from what the British redcoats did in India from the late
1700’s throughout the 1800’s. Their military might assured that
the East India Tea Company could continue to extract resources
from the locals.
At the time the locals were called heathens,
implying they were subhuman and therefore could be safely
dispatched. Now they are called terrorists -- same thing.
Dehumanize your foe to help rationalize one’s behaviors. It’s a
tried and true practice of war propaganda.
How This Affects You
While we might be tempted to sit in our
Western environs, secure in the idea that at least we aren’t
‘over there’ where all the bad things are happening, it would be
a mistake to think that this turmoil will not impact you.
I’m not talking about the ultra-remote chance
of being a victim of blow-back terrorism either. I am referring
to the idea that it would be a mistake to think that any
government(s) that think nothing of ruining entire MENA
countries will hesitate to throw anybody else under the bus that
gets in their way.
Ben Bernanke gave no thought to throwing
granny under the bus in order to help the big banks get even
bigger. He willingly and knowing transferred over a trillion
dollars away from savers and handed it to the big banks.
Similarly, we shouldn't expect enlightened
behavior to emerge from the shadows of leadership once things
get even dicer on the world stage. In fact, we should expect
the opposite.
It would be a mistake to think that powers in
charge would not turn their malign intent inwards toward their
own populace if/when necessary. Today it’s Syria, yesterday it
was Libya, but tomorrow it might be us.
The people of France recently got a small
taste of the horror that has been visited upon the people of
Iraq, Syria, Yemen and Libya. And while I have no interest in
seeing any more violence anywhere, perhaps the people of France
will finally begin to ask what happened and why. I don’t mean
the fine details of the night of the massacre, but how it came
to be considered a ‘thing to do’ at all by the people who did
it. (For those unaware, France has been particularly involved
for years in fomenting revolt within Syria)
Conclusion
My intention in stringing these dots together
is so that we can have an informed discussion about what’s
happening in Syria and the Middle East at large. I am not at all
interested in trying to understand events through the framing
lenses of religion and/or ‘terrorism’, both of which are tools
of distraction in my experience.
Instead, I want to understand the power
dynamics at play. And to try to peel back the layers, to
understand why the powers that be consider this region so
important at this moment in history.
I think they know as well as we do that the
shale oil revolution is not a revolution at all but a retirement
party for an oil industry that has given us everything we hold
economically dear but is on its last legs.
I think that the power structures of the next
twenty years are going to be utterly shaped by energy – who has
it, who needs it and who’s controlling it.
Saudi Arabia is acting increasingly desperate
here and I think we know why. They have a saying there: “My
father rode a camel, I drove a car, my son flies a jet and his
son will ride a camel.”
They know as well as anyone that their oil
wealth will run out someday; and so, too, will the West’s
interest in them. With no giant military to protect them, the
royalty in Saudi Arabia should have some serious concerns about
the future.
Heck, it’s even worse than that:
Saudi Wells Running Dry — of Water
— Spell End of Desert Wheat
Nov 3, 2015
Saudi Arabia became a net exporter
of wheat in 1984 from
producing almost none in the 1970s. The self-sufficiency
program became a victim of its own success, however, as it
quickly depleted aquifers
that haven’t been filled since the last Ice Age.
In an unexpected U-turn, the government
said in 2008 it was phasing out the policy, reducing
purchases of domestic wheat each year by 12.5 percent and
bridging the gap progressively with imports.
The last official local harvest occurred
in May, although the United Nations Food and Agriculture
Organization projects that a small crop of about metric
30,000 tons for traditional specialty bakery products will
"prevail" in 2016. At its peak
in 1992, Saudi Arabia produced 4.1 million tons of wheat and
was one of the world’s top 10 wheat exporters.

(Source)
The Saudis did something very unwise – they
pumped an aquifer filled over 10,000 years ago and used it to
grow wheat in the desert. Now their wells are running dry and
they have no more water.
And yet their population is expanding rapidly
even as their oil fields deplete. There’s a very bad
intersection for Saudi Arabia, and the rulers know it.
It helps to explain their recent actions of
lashing out against long-standing regional foes and helps to
explain the increasing desperation of their moves to help
destabilize (and even bomb) their neighbors.
My point here is that as resources become
tight, the ruling powers can be expected to act in increasingly
desperate ways. This is a tenet of the Long Emergency of which
James Kunstler wrote.
The only response that makes any sense to me,
at the individual level, is to reduce your needs and increase
your resilience.
This is something we cover in great detail in
our new book,
Prosper!: How To Prepare for the Future and Create a World Worth
Inheriting, so I won’t go into all the details here.
Instead, my goal is to help cast a clarifying light on recent
events and add some necessary detail that can help us more fully
appreciate what’s happening around the world and why taking
prudent preparations today is becoming increasingly urgent.
~ Chris Martenson