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I’m
in London, in transit for our return flight to Florida, and I have a
brief, but painful, message for you this morning:
We’re
going to lose the war in Iraq.
This is
hard to swallow, I know. But it seems blatantly obvious to everyone
except those who have the most to lose.
Every
single newspaper on this side of the Atlantic is headlining the
deepening chaos in Iraq. Even the sentencing of Saddam on Saturday,
heralded in the U.S. as a victory, is likely to deepen the sectarian
strife and inflame the anti-American insurgency, according to the Wall
Street Journal’s Europe edition this morning.
In
Washington, most politicians now seem vividly aware of the crisis —
not to mention the sweeping impact it’s likely to have at the polls
tomorrow.
But,
strangely, the movers and shakers on Wall Street still seem oblivious to
the impact the war could have on investors.
The
Iraq war is the elephant in the living room. Investors look at it but
don’t see it. They feel its presence but don’t want to touch it.
The
Most Likely Scenario
Among the
various scenarios that U.S. military strategists are now painting,
here’s the one I believe to be the mostly likely:
Phase
1.
In the wake of spreading violence, the moderate, pro-American government
factions fall from power in Baghdad. In their place, Moktadr al Sadr,
leader of the radical anti-American factions in the current government,
comes to power.
He
compels the U.S. army to pack up and leave.
He
transforms all, or most, of Iraq into a fundamentalist Shiite Republic
similar to Iran’s.
He forges
a holy Shiite alliance with Iran’s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and they aim
for religious, political, military and economic supremacy over the
entire region.
Phase
2.
Between them, Iraq and Iran control more petroleum reserves than Saudi
Arabia. Their combined armies, including the U.S.-trained and
U.S.-equipped forces in Iraq, also challenge Saudi’s military might.
Together,
they aggressively pursue an agenda to depose traditional Sunni leaders
in nearly a dozen Muslim nations.
Phase
3. There
thus emerges a new axis of power — extremely radical, extremely
destabilizing and powerfully resistant to foreign pressure.
This axis
of power, in turn, wields tremendous leverage over the global oil market
and the financial destiny of the West as a whole.
How
likely is this scenario? Highly likely! And those that agree with me are
no longer such a small minority ...
Nearly
Unanimous
Warnings of Chaos
I now
count over a dozen warnings of chaos, many from the highest-placed
sources:
Three
weeks ago, a special briefing by the U.S. Central Command declared that
Iraq is “on the brink of chaos,” slamming home four
tough-to-swallow-but-hard-to-dispute conclusions:
Conclusion
#1.
Iraq’s urban areas are suffering wave after wave of ethnic cleansing,
the fundamental driver behind civil war.
Conclusion
#2.
Violence in Iraq has reached an all-time high and is spreading
geographically.
Conclusion
#3.
The massive U.S. effort to hastily recruit and train a large Iraqi army
and police force is backfiring. These forces, overtly and covertly loyal
to warring militia leaders, are no longer part of the solution.
They’re the focal point of the problem.
Conclusion
#4.
The pivotal event that sealed the fate of America’s enterprise in Iraq
was the bombing of the Golden Dome Shiite mosque in Samara — precisely
what I told you in Money and Markets on the day that it
happened.
Similarly,
just around the time the Central Command report was being presented to
the top brass at the Pentagon, the head of the British Armed forces and
Chief of the British General Staff, General Sir Richard Dannatt, told
the Daily Mail that British forces should leave Iraq
“soon.”
His
reason: Rather than helping to quell the violence, the sheer presence of
foreign armed forces “exacerbates the security problems.”
Even
Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John W. Warner (R-Va.), newly
returned from a tour of Iraq, has declared that the country is “on the
verge of chaos.” But he’s not the only Republican breaking ranks
with the administration:
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham (S.C.) says “the current plan is not
working.”
Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas, a key Bush supporter, announced last
week that she would not have supported the Iraq War had she known that
there were no weapons of mass destruction hidden in the country.
James A. Baker III, former chief of staff and secretary of state under
Ronald Reagan and campaign manager for President Bush’s father, has
joined a bipartisan commission recommending a fundamental change in U.S.
strategy in Iraq.
National Review founder William F. Buckley, Jr., writes that the
American objective in Iraq has “failed” and that the Bush
Administration has to decide how best to “cope” with this failure.
Conservative columnist George Will calls the war a “fiasco” and
insists that “stay the course” on Iraq means “Americans dying to
prevent Shiites and Sunnis from killing each other” — a policy that
will result in “100 fewer Republicans in Congress” if it’s blindly
pursued for another two years.
Cleary,
Politicians See the Handwriting
On the wall. So Why Don’t Investors?
Why are
most investors so complacent? Why do they see only the rosy side of the
news?
A key
reason is that investors have so far been shielded from the economic
impact of the war because the U.S. government has failed to raise taxes
to pay for it. Instead ...
But this
doesn’t reduce the war’s economic impact. It only postpones it.
What will
happen when the war ends in defeat?
First,
worldwide confidence in the U.S. will plunge, prompting foreign
investors to sell their U.S. investments. The U.S. dollar and U.S. bonds
will plunge.
Second,
due to fears of the Iran-Iraq axis, oil prices will go berserk, likely
surpassing the $100-per-barrel level.
Third,
gold will skyrocket, as investors flee the dollar for safety.
My
recommendation: Don’t be deceived by the false optimism that has
overcome Wall Street. Stay the course.
Good luck
and God bless!
Martin
Martin
Weiss,
Ph.D.
Editor, Safe Money Report
support@martinweiss.com

© 2006 Martin D. Weiss,
Ph.D.
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