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New York Times Thomas Friedman: "No problem
with a war for oil"
By Kate Randall and Barry Grey
15 January 2003
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In recent weeks popular opposition to the impending war against
Iraq has grown not only internationally, but also within the US.
Even polls published by the pro-war American media show a sharp
drop in support for Bushs war drive. A CBS News poll published
January 7 reported that only 29 percent of Americans support unilateral
US military action against Iraq, while 63 percent favor a diplomatic
solution.
Nevertheless, the Bush administration continues its feverish
military buildup in the Persian Gulf, with an estimated 160,000
troops now present or en route to the area. According to the same
CBS poll, while a majority of Americans oppose a war, 74 percent
believe it is inevitablea feeling that owes a great deal
to the prostration of the Democratic Party to the Bush White House
and its general support for the administrations war policy.
The governments justification for an invasionbased
on the claim that Iraq poses an imminent military threatis
becoming more and more threadbare. There is open discussion in
the media that the failure of UN inspectors to find evidence of
Iraqi weapons of mass destruction is fueling public skepticism
toward the administrations war agitation.
Recent events in Korea have further undermined the White House
propaganda campaign. Government spokesmen have been unable to
explain the disparity between American policy toward North Korea
and the administrations war drive against Iraq. At least
publicly, the administration insists that North Koreawhich
is openly developing a nuclear weapons capacityis to be
dealt with through diplomatic channels, while Iraqwhere
there is no evidence of nuclear weaponsis to be bombed,
invaded and militarily occupied.
In the face of the failure of the government/media campaign
to build mass support for a US invasion of Iraq, New York Times
foreign affairs columnist Thomas Friedman has felt obliged to
come to the aid of the Bush war cabal by proposing a shift in
its propaganda. Hence Friedmans January 5 column headlined
A War for Oil?
In this thoroughly cynical piece, Friedman concedes what is
obvious to anyone who has followed the US military buildup against
Iraq with any objectivity: Bushs plan to invade the country
is driven, above all, by a determination to seize control of Iraqi
oil.
The column is by no means the first effort by Friedman to provide
a cover of legitimacy and even humaneness to Washingtons
war drive. On December 1, for example, he authored a column in
which he urged his readers to pay no attention to
the inspections taking place in Iraq. Instead, to fabricate a
pretext for war, he advocated that the United Nations, at the
bidding of the US, kidnap Iraqi scientists, remove them and their
families from Iraq, and allow American interrogators to extract
proof of weapons of mass destruction from their captives.
[See Inventing
a pretext for war against IraqFriedman of the Times
executes an assignment for the Pentagon]
At that time, Friedman had no quarrel with the official line
that Iraq represented an imminent threat to the safety of Americans.
But, despite the columnists urging, millions of Americans
have been paying attention to the weapons inspectionsas
well as the rising toll of layoffs and pay cuts at homeand
have grown increasingly hostile to the administrations obsession
with war, as well as to Bush himself.
Thus the liberal war hawk Friedman feels compelled
to shore up the flagging credibility of the Bush administrations
case for war. Is the war that the Bush team is preparing
to launch in Iraq really a war for oil? he asks. My
short answer is yes. Any war we launch in Iraq will certainly
bein partabout oil. To deny that is laughable.
Friedman admits, quite openly, that the official reasons given
by the government for a war against Iraq are lies, and crude ones
at that. He writes that Bushs recent attempt to hype
the Iraqi threat by saying that an Iraqi attack on Americawhich
is most unlikelywould cripple our economy was
embarrassing.
He continues: Lets cut the nonsense. The primary
reason the Bush team is more focused on Saddam [than on North
Korea] is because if he were to acquire weapons of mass destruction,
it might give him the leverage he has long soughtnot to
attack us, but to extend his influence over the worlds largest
source of oil, the Persian Gulf.
Thus, having acknowledged that the US government is lying to
the American people and the world, Friedman seeks to fashion a
new justification for war against Iraq. It is not a matter of
self-defense, or even countering something Iraq has done. Rather,
the country must be attacked and occupied because the regime mightin
the futureextend its influence over the worlds largest
oil reserves.
There is nothing illegitimate or immoral about the US
being concerned that an evil, megalomaniacal dictator might acquire
excessive influence over the natural resource that powers the
worlds industrial base, he writes.
Leaving aside Friedmans use of pre-packaged epithets
to demonize the Iraqi ruler, this statement is remarkable for
its espousal of a course that violates every cannon of international
law. Friedman is asserting that the US has the right, unilaterally
and preemptively, to attack any country or regime that it deems
to be a threat to the worlds industrial base.
In other words, the US has the right to wage wars of plunder
against those countries that stand in the way of its monopoly
of vital natural resources. If, in the process, it violates the
national sovereignty of weak and small countries, deprives the
local populace of the benefits of resources located on its national
soil, and kills untold thousands of peopleso be it.
It is self-evident, Friedman would have us believe, that the
world would be far safer and happier if the oil in the Persian
Gulf were in the hands of American-based oil giants and the US
military machine than if it remained in the hands of the Iraqis.
But the implications of this argument go beyond Iraq and the
Persian Gulf. If Friedmans injunction is true for Iraqi
oil, then why not for Russian oil, or that of Venezuela, Nigeria
and other oil-possessing nations? Why, moreover, should Americas
global mission be limited to the protection of oil?
What about iron, copper, cobalt, uranium and other vital ores?
Can the US permit other nations to get control of that other increasingly
scarce strategic resourcewater?
The logic of Friedmans position is clear. It is a formula
for imperialist aggression and plunder not seen since the heyday
of the Nazis in the 1930s and 1940s. There is no essential difference
between the impulse of global domination by means of military
violence that underlies Friedmans arguments and that which
was summed up in the Nazi demand for Lebensraum.
In line with the liberal pretensions of the New
York Times editorial board, Friedman tries to give his defense
of imperialist war a progressive twist. Advocating a politically-correct
policy of aggression, he argues that the Bush team would
have a stronger case for fighting a war partly for oil it if made
clear by its behavior that it was acting for the benefit of the
planet, not simply to fuel American excesses.
I have no problem with a war for oil, he writes,
if we accompany it with a real program for energy conservation.
Friedman concludes by declaring that an oil war in Iraq would
be quite legitimate if, after bombing and conquering the
country, the US helped Iraqis build a more progressive,
democratizing Arab state. Here the Times columnist
echoes the growing chorus of liberal apologists for American imperialism,
who seek to attribute a historically progressive and humanitarian
role to the single most violent and destructive force on the planet.
See Also:
Britain: Foreign secretary admits oil
central to war vs. Iraq
[14 January 2003]
UN report details humanitarian disaster
expected from war vs. Iraq
[13 January 2003]
Inventing a pretext
for war against Iraq
Friedman of the Times executes an assignment for the Pentagon
[3 December 2002]
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