Part
I: The disintegration of the Bush Presidency
By drawing attention to
Iraq and the obvious role oil plays in US policy today, the Bush-Cheney
administration has done just that: They have drawn the world’s
energy-deficit powers’ attention firmly to the strategic battle over
energy and especially oil. This is already having consequences for the
global economy in terms of $75 a barrel crude oil price levels. Now it
is taking on the dimension of what one former US Defense Secretary
rightly calls a ‘geopolitical nightmare’ for the United States.
The creation by
Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld and company of a geopolitical nightmare, is also
the backdrop to comprehend the dramatic political shift within the US
establishment in the past six months, away from the Bush Presidency.
Simply put: Bush/Cheney and their band of neo-conservative war-hawks,
with their special relationship to the capacities of Israel in Iraq and
across the Mideast, were given a chance. The chance was to deliver on
the US strategic goal of control of petroleum resources globally, in
order to ensure the US role as first among equals over the next decade
and beyond.
Not only have they
failed to ‘deliver’ that goal of US strategic dominance. They have
also threatened the very basis of continued US hegemony or as the
Rumsfeld Pentagon likes to term it, ‘Full Spectrum Dominance.’ The
move by Bolivian President Evo Morales, following meetings with
Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez and Fidel Castro, to assert national control
over oil and gas resources is only the latest demonstration of the
decline in US power projection.
Future of the Bush
Doctrine in the balance
As the reality of US
foreign policy is obscured by the endless rhetoric of ‘defending
democracy’ and the like, it is useful to recall that US foreign policy
since the collapse of the Soviet Union has been open and explicit. It is
to prevent at any cost the congealing of a potential combination of
nations that might challenge US dominance. This is the US policy as
elaborated in Bush’s June 2002 West Point speech.
There the President
outlined a radical departure in explicit US foreign policy in two vital
areas: A policy of preventive war, should the US be threatened by
terrorists or by rogue states engaged in the production of weapons of
mass destruction. Second, the right of self-defense authorized the USA
to launch pre-emptive attacks against potential aggressors, cutting them
off before they are able to launch strikes against the US.
The new US doctrine,
the Bush Doctrine, also proclaimed, ‘the duty of the US to pursue
unilateral military action when acceptable multilateral solutions cannot
be found.’ It went further and declared it US policy that the ‘United
States has, and intends to keep, military strengths beyond challenge.’
The US would take whatever actions necessary to continue its status as
the world's sole military superpower. This resembled British Empire
policy before World War I, namely, that the Royal Navy must be larger
than the world's next two largest navies put together.
The policy also
included pro-active regime change around the world under the slogan of
‘extending democracy.’ As Bush stated at West Point, ‘America has
no empire to extend or utopia to establish. We wish for others only what
we wish for ourselves -- safety from violence, the rewards of liberty,
and the hope for a better life.’
Those policy fragments
were gathered into an official policy in September 2002, a National
Security Council text entitled the National Security Strategy of the
United States. That text was drafted for the President’s signature by
then NSA head Condi Rice. She in turn took an earlier policy document
prepared under the 1992 Bush senior Presidency by neo-conservative Paul
Wolfowitz.
The Bush Doctrine of
Rice had been fully delineated in 1992 in a Defense Planning Guidance
‘final draft’ done by then Under Secretary of Defense for Policy,
Paul Wolfowitz, and known in Washington as the Wolfowitz Doctrine.
Wolfowitz declared then, that with the threat of a Soviet attack gone,
the US was the unchallenged sole Superpower and should pursue its global
agenda including pre-emptive war and unilateral foreign policy actions.
An internal leak of the
draft to the New York Times then led President Bush senior to
announce it was ‘only a draft and not US policy.’ By 2002 it was
officially US policy.
The Bush Doctrine
stated that ‘military pre-emption’ was legitimate when the threat
was ‘emerging’ or ‘sufficient, even if uncertainty remains as to
the time and place of the enemy's attack.’ That left a hole large
enough for an Abrams tank to roll through, according to critics.
Afghanistan, as case in point, was declared a legitimate target for US
military bombardment, because the Taliban regime had said it would turn
Osama bin Laden over only when the US demonstrated proof he was behind
the September 11 World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks. Bush didn’t
give proof. He did launch a ‘pre-emptive’ war. At the time, few
bothered to look to the niceties of international law.
The Bush Doctrine was
and is a neo-conservative doctrine of preventive and pre-emptive war. It
has proven to be a strategic catastrophe for the United States role as
sole Superpower. That is the background to comprehend all events today
as they are unfolding in and around Washington.
The future of that Bush
Doctrine foreign policy and in fact the future ability of the United
States, as sole Superpower or sole anything to hold forth is what is now
at stake in the issue of the future of the Bush Presidency. Useful to
note is that Deputy Defense Secretary Wolfowitz wrote his 1992 draft for
then Defense Secretary, Dick Cheney.
Bush Administration
in crisis
The most fascinating
indication of a sea-change within the American political establishment
towards the Bush Doctrine and those who are behind it is the developing
debate around the 83-page paper, first published on the official website
of Harvard University, criticizing the dominant role of Israel in
shaping US foreign policy.
The paper was initially
trashed by the ADL of B’nai Brith and select neo-conservative writers,
as ‘anti-semitic’, which it is not, and as one commentator tried to
smear it, as ‘echoing the views of former KKK leader and white power
advocate David Duke,’ who has also attacked the Israel lobby. However,
profoundly significant is the fact that this time, leading mainstream
media, including Richard Cohen in the Washington Post , have come to
defense of Walt and Mearsheimer. Even certain Israeli press has done so.
The taboo of speaking publicly of the pro-Israel agenda of
neo-conservatives has apparently been broken. That suggests that the
old-guard foreign policy establishment, types such as Zbigniew
Brzezinski and Brent Scowcroft and their allies, are stepping up to
retake foreign policy leadership. The neo-cons have proved a colossal
failure in their defense of America’s strategic real interests as the
realists see it.
The paper, ‘The
Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy,’ was written by two highly
respected US foreign policy realists and consultants to the State
Department. The authors are neither neo-Nazi skinheads nor anti-Semites.
John J. Mearsheimer is political science professor and co-director of
the Program on International Security Policy at the University of
Chicago. Stephen M. Walt is academic dean and a chaired professor at
Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. Both are members of the
Coalition for a Realistic Foreign Policy. They are so-called ‘realists’
along with Kissinger, Scowcroft, Brzezinski.
Some of their
conclusions about the Israel lobby's goals:
•
‘No lobby has managed to divert foreign policy as far from what the
American national interest would otherwise suggest, while simultaneously
convincing Americans that U.S. and Israeli interests are essentially
identical.’
•
American supporters of Israel promoted the war against Iraq. The senior
administration officials who spearheaded the campaign were also in the
vanguard of the pro-Israel lobby, e.g., then Deputy Defense Secretary
Paul Wolfowitz; Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Douglas Feith;
Elliott Abrams, Mideast affairs at the White House; David Wurmser,
Mideast affairs for Vice President Richard Cheney; Richard Perle, first
among neocon equals, chairman of the Defense Policy Board, an
influential advisory body of strategic experts.
•
A similar effort is now under way to bomb Iran's nuclear facilities.
•
AIPAC is fighting registering as foreign agents because this would place
severe limitations on its congressional activities, particularly in the
legislative electoral arena. ... American politicians remain acutely
sensitive to campaign contributions and other forms of political
pressure and major media outlets are likely to remain sympathetic to
Israel no matter what it does.
It’s useful to quote
the official goals of the Coalition for a Realistic Foreign Policy, of
which Walt and Mearsheimer are members, to have a better indication of
their factional line-up in the current factional battle inside the US
elite. The website of that Coalition states,
‘Against the backdrop
of an ever-bloodier conflict in Iraq, American foreign policy is moving
in a dangerous direction toward empire.
Worrisome imperial
trends are apparent in the Bush administration's National Security
Strategy. That document pledges to maintain America's military dominance
in the world, and it does so in a way that encourages other nations to
form countervailing coalitions and alliances. We can expect, and are
seeing now, multiple balances of power forming against us. People resent
and resist domination, no matter how benign.
Authors Walt and
Mearsheimer also note that Richard Perle and Douglas Feith put their
names to a 1996 policy blueprint for Benjamin Netanyahu's then incoming
government in Israel, titled, ‘A Clean Break: A New Strategy for
Securing the Realm [Israel].’
In that document, Perle
and Feith advised Netanyahu that the rebuilding of Zionism must abandon
any thought of trading land for peace with the Palestinians, i.e.,
repeal the Oslo accords. Next, Saddam Hussein must be overthrown and
democracy established in Iraq, which would then prove contagious in
Israel's other Arab neighbors. That was in 1996, seven years before Bush
launched a near unilateral war for regime change in Iraq.
When NBC's TV’s Tim
Russert on the widely-watched ‘Meet the Press’ asked Perle about his
geopolitical laundry list for Israel's benefit, Perle replied, ‘What's
wrong with that?’
For all this to
succeed, Perle and Feith wrote, ‘Israel would have to win broad
American support.’ To ensure this support, they advised the Israeli
prime minister to use ‘language familiar to Americans by tapping into
themes of past US administrations during the Cold War, which apply as
well to Israel.’ An Israeli columnist in Ha'aretz accused Perle and
Feith of, ‘walking a fine line’ between ‘their loyalty to American
governments and Israeli interests.’
Today, Perle has been
forced to take a low profile in Washington after initially heading
Rumsfeld’s Defense Policy Board at the Pentagon. Feith was forced to
leave the State Department for the private sector. That was more than a
year ago.
Wave of Bush
resignations underway
Now White House Chief
of Staff and a man who was a Bush family loyal retainer for 25 years,
Andrew Card, has left, and in an announcement that apparently shocked
the neo-conservative hawks like William Kristol, on May 5 Bush’s
pro-neo-con CIA head, Porter Goss, abruptly announced his resignation in
a one line statement.
Goss’ departure was
preceded by the growing scandal involving Goss’ Number 3 man at CIA,
Executive Director, Kyle ‘Dusty’ Foggo. Last December the CIA
Inspector General opened an investigation into Foggo’s role in
Pengaton-CIA contract fraud. Foggo is also being linked to an emerging
White House-GOP sex scandal which could pale the Monika Lewinsky affair.
As Goss violated seniority precedence in naming Foggo to No. 3 at CIA,
the Goss resignation and the imminent breaking sex and bribery scandals
around Foggo are being linked by some media.
The Foggo case is tied
to disgraced Republican Congressman, Randall ‘Duke’ Cunningham.
Federal prosecutors have accused, as an un-indicted co-conspirator, one
of Foggo’s closest friends, San Diego businessman Brent Wilkes, of
participating in a scheme to bribe Cunningham, the former GOP
congressman from San Diego. Cunningham in turn is linked to convicted
Republican money launderer and fix-it man, Jack Abramoff. Foggo oversaw
contracts involving at least one of the companies accused of paying
bribes to Congressman Cunningham. The Wall Street Journal reports that
Foggo has been a close friend, since junior high school, with California
defense contractor Brent R. Wilkes. They report, an ongoing ‘criminal
investigation’ centers on whether Mr. Foggo used his postings at the
CIA to improperly steer contracts to Mr. Wilkes's companies.’
Wilkes was implicated
in the charges filed against Cunningham, as an un-indicted
co-conspirator who allegedly paid $630,000 in bribes to Cunningham for
help in obtaining federal defense and other contracts. No charges have
been filed against Wilkes, though federal prosecutors in San Diego are
working to build a case against him, as well as Foggo.
The FBI and federal
prosecutors are investigating evidence that Wilkes had given gifts to
Foggo and paid for various services, including alleged sex orgies at the
Watergate (now Westin), while Foggo was in a position to help him gain
particular CIA contracts.
The CIA inspector
general has opened an investigation into the spy agency's executive
director, Kyle "Dusty" Foggo, and his connections to two
defense contractors accused of bribing a member of Congress and Pentagon
officials.
The Goss resignation
follows on the heels of public calls for Secretary Rumsfeld’s
immediate resignation over the Iraq military debacle coming from a
growing chorus of retired US military generals.
The latest in the slow,
systematic ‘let ‘em twist in the wind’ process of downsizing the
Bush regime, was an incident in Atlanta May 4 before a supposedly
friendly foreign policy audience where Rumsfeld spoke. During the
question period, he was confronted with his laying about the ground for
going to war in Iraq.
Ray McGovern, a 27-year
CIA veteran who once gave then-President George H.W. Bush his morning
intelligence briefings, engaged in an extended debate with Rumsfeld. He
asked why Rumsfeld had insisted before the Iraq invasion that there was
‘bulletproof evidence’ linking Saddam Hussein to Al Qaeda.
‘Was that a lie, Mr.
Rumsfeld, or was that manufactured somewhere else? Because all of my CIA
colleagues disputed that and so did the 9/11 commission,’ McGovern
asked a startled Rumsfeld. ‘Why did you lie to get us into a war that
was not necessary?’
Significant in terms of
the shift reflected in how the establishment media handles Rumsfeld,
Cheney and Bush today is the following account in the Los Angeles Times:
‘At the start of the
exchange, Rumsfeld remained his usual unflappable self, insisting,
"I haven't lied; I did not lie then," before launching into a
vigorous defense of the administration's prewar assertions on Iraq's
weapons of mass destruction.
But Rumsfeld became
uncharacteristically tongue-tied when McGovern pressed him on claims
that he knew where unconventional Iraqi weapons were located.
"You said you knew
where they were," McGovern said.
"I did not. I said
I knew where suspected sites were," Rumsfeld retorted.
McGovern then read from
statements the Defense secretary had made that weapons were located near
Tikrit, Iraq, and Baghdad…’
Rumsfeld was stone
silent. The entire episode was filmed and shown on network television.
Rumsfeld’s days are clearly numbered. Karl Rove is rumoured to be days
away from being co-indicted with Cheney aide Lewis Libby for the Valerie
Plame CIA leak affair. Recall that that affair was over alleged Niger
uranium evidence as basis for convincing Congress to waive a War
Declaration on Iraq and give Bush carte blanche. All threads are being
carefully woven, evidently by a re-emerging realist faction into a
tapestry which will likely spell Impeachment, perhaps also of the Vice
President, the real power behind this Presidency.
Part II: Disintegration of US Eurasia Strategic
Influence
A Foreign Policy
disaster over China
In this context, the
recent diplomatic insult from Bush to visiting China President Hu Jintao,
is doubly disastrous for the US foreign position. Bush acted on a script
written by the anti-China neo-conservatives, to deliberately insult and
humiliate Hu at the White House. First was the incident of allowing a
Taiwanese ‘journalist,’ a Falun Gong member, into the
carefully-screened White House press conference, to rant in a tirade
against Chinese human rights for more than three minutes, with no
attempt at removal, at a White House filmed press conference. Then came
the playing of the Chinese National Hymn for Hu. The ‘Chinese’ hymn,
however, was the (Taiwan) Republic of China hymn, not the (Beijing)
Peoples’ Republic hymn.
It was no ‘slip-up by
the professional White House protocol people. It was a deliberate effort
to humiliate the Chinese leader. The problem is that the US economy has
become dependent on Chinese trade imports and on Chinese holdings of US
Treasury securities. China today is the largest holder of dollar
reserves in form of US Treasury paper with an estimated $825 billion.
Were Beijing to decide to exit the US bond market, even in part, it
would cause a dollar free-fall and collapse of the $7 trillion US real
estate market, a wave of US bank failures and huge unemployment. It’s
a real option even if unlikely at the moment.
China’s Hu didn’s
waste time or tears over the Bush affront. He immediately went on to
Saudi Arabia for a 3 day state visit where both signed trade, defense
and security agreements. Needless to say, this is no small slap in the
fact to Washington by the traditionally ‘loyal’ Saudi Royal House.
Hu signed a deal for
SABIC of Saudi Arabia to build a $5.2 billion oil refinery and
petrochemical project in northeast China. At the beginning of this year,
King Abdullah was in Beijing for a full state visit. Hmmmmm…Since the
Roosevelt-King Ibn Saud deal giving US Aramco and not the British
exclusive concession to develop Saudi oil in 1943, Saudi Arabia has been
regarded in Washington as a core strategic sphere of interest.
Hu then went on to
Morocco, another traditional US sphere of interest, Nigeria and Kenya,
all regarded as US spheres of interest. Hmmmm. Only two months ago
Rumsfeld was in Morocco to offer US arms. Hu is offering to finance
energy exploration there.
The SCO and Iran
events
The latest developments
around the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) and Iran further
underscore the dramatic change in the geopolitical position of the
United States.
The SCO was created in
Shanghai on June 15, 2001 by Russia and China along with four former
USSR Central Asian republics-- Kazakhstan, Kyrgystan, Tajikistan and
Uzbekistan. Prior to September 11 2001, and the US declaration of an
Axis of Evil in January 2002, the SCO was merely background geopolitical
chatter as far as Washington was concerned. Today the SCO, which has to
date been blacked out almost entirely in US mainstream media, is
defining a new political counterweight to US hegemony and its ‘one-polar’
world.
At the next June 15
2006 SCO meeting, Iran has been invited to become a full SCO member.
Last month in Teheran,
the Chinese Ambassador, Lio G Tan announced that a pending oil and gas
deal between China and Iran is ready to be signed.
The deal is said to be
worth at least $100 billion, and includes development of the huge
Yadavaran onshore oil field. China’s Sinopec would agree to buy 250
million tons of LNG over 25 years. No wonder China is not jumping to
back Washington against Iran in the UN Security Council. The US had been
trying to put massive pressure on Beijing to halt the deal, for obvious
geopolitical reasons, to no avail. Another major defeat for Washington.
Iran is also moving on
plans to deliver natural gas via a pipeline to Pakistan and India.
Energy ministers from the three countries met in Doha recently and plan
to meet again this month in Pakistan.
The pipeline progress
is a direct rebuff to Washington's efforts to steer investors clear of
Iran. Ironically, US opposition is driving these countries into each
others’ arms, Washington’s ‘geopolitical nightmare.’
At the same June 15 SCO
meeting, India, which Bush is personally attempting to woo as a
geopolitical Asian ‘counterweight’ to China, will also be invited to
join SCO. As well, Mongolia and Pakistan will be invited to join SCO.
SCO is gaining in geopolitical throw-weight quite substantially.
Iran’s Deputy Foreign
Minister Manouchehr Mohammadi told ITAR-Tass in Moscow in April that
Iranian membership in SCO could ‘make the world more fair.’ He also
spoke of building an Iran-Russia ‘gas-and-oil arc’ in which the two
giant energy producers would coordinate activities.
US out in cold in
Central Asia
The admission of Iran
into SCO opens many new options for Iran and the region. By virtue of
SCO membership, Iran can now take part in SCO projects, which in turn
means access to badly-needed technology, investment, trade,
infrastructure development. It will have major implications for global
energy security.
The SCO has reportedly
set up a working group of experts ahead of the June summit to develop a
common SCO Asian energy strategy, and discuss joint pipeline projects,
oil exploration and related activities. Iran sits on the world’s
second largest natural gas reserves, and Russia has the largest. Russia
is the world’s second largest oil producer after Saudi Arabia. These
are no small moves.
India is desperate to
come to terms with Iran for energy but is being pressured by Washington
not to.
The Bush
Administration last year tried to get ‘observer status’ at SCO but
was turned down. The rebuff - along with SCO's demands for a reduced
American military presence in Central Asia, deeper Russia-China
cooperation and the setbacks to US diplomacy in Central Asia – have
prompted a policy review in Washington.
After her October 2005
Central Asian tour, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice announced
re-organization of the US State Department's South Asia Bureau to
include the Central Asian states, and a new US ‘Greater Central Asia’
scheme.
Washington is trying to
wean Central Asian states away from Russia and China. Hamid Karzai's
government in Kabul has not responded to SCO's overtures. Given his ties
historically to Washington, he likely has little choice.
Gennady Yefstafiyev, a
former general in Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service, says, ‘The
US's long term goals in Iran are obvious: to engineer the downfall of
the current regime; to establish control over Iran's oil and gas; and to
use its territory as the shortest route for the transportation of
hydrocarbons under US control from the regions of Central Asia and the
Caspian Sea bypassing Russia and China. This is not to mention Iran's
intrinsic military and strategic significance.’
Washington had based
its strategy on Kazakhstan being its key partner in Central Asia. The US
wants to expand its physical control over Kazakhstan's oil reserves and
formalize Kazakh oil transportation via Baku-Ceyhan pipeline, as well as
creating the dominant US role in Caspian Sea security. But Kazakhstan
isn’t playing ball. President Nursultan Nazarbayev went to Moscow on
April 3 to reaffirm his continued dependence on Russian oil pipelines.
And China, as we noted back in December, is making major energy and
pipeline deals with Kazakhstan as well.
To make Washington’s
geopolitical problems worse, despite securing a major US military basing
deal with Uzbekistan after September 2001, Washington's relations with
Uzbekistan today are disastrous. The US effort to isolate President
Islam Karimov, along lines of the Ukraine ‘Orange Revolution’
tactics, is not working. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh visited
Tashkent in late April.
As well, Tajikistan
relies heavily on Russia's support. In Kyrgyzstan, despite covert US
attempts to create dissensions within the regime, President Burmanbek
Bakiyev's alliance with Moscow-backed Prime Minister Felix Kulov, is
holding.
In the space of 12
months Russia and China have managed to move the pieces on the
geopolitical ‘chess board’ of Eurasia away from what had been an
overwhelming US strategic advantage, to the opposite, where the US is
increasingly isolated. It’s potentially the greatest strategic defeat
for the US power projection of the post World War II period. This is
also the strategic background to the re-emergence of the so-called
realist faction in US policy.

© 2006 F.
William Engdahl
Editorial Archive
F.
William Engdahl
is author of
‘A Century of War:
Anglo-American Oil Politics and the New World Order, Pluto Press and
the soon-to-be released book, ‘Seeds
of Destruction: The Geopolitics of Gene-ocide’. He can be contacted
through his website, www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net.
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