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The Wall Street Journal spells it out: Turkey could
lose oil spoils of war
By Henry Michaels
7 March 2003
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For all the denials in Washington and the corporate media,
the looming invasion of Iraq is all about oil and strategic control
over the Middle East and the wider Central Asian region. The Wall
Street Journal, the voice of American big business, declared
as much in its March 4 editorial denouncing the vote by the Turkish
parliament to reject the use of the country as a staging post
for the US operation.
The editorial bemoaned the failure of Turkeys political
and military leaders to shape public opinion to recognize
the alleged benefits of supporting the US takeover of Iraq. It
summarized the benefits as follows:
The badly needed cash (and US goodwill) aside, Turkey
would benefit as much as any nation from a neighboring Iraq that
was free of both a dictator and UN sanctions. Turkey would also
give itself a larger voice in postwar Iraq, especially in dealing
with the Kurds. The Turkish military was demanding joint supervision
of the disarmament of the Kurds after the war, for example, and
for a buffer zone manned by Turkish troops in northern Iraq, presumably
in order to limit the free passage of Kurds into southern Turkey.
Now the US will have every right to ignore Turkish desires and
work with Kurds militarily and politically after the war. And
the Turks can forget about any postwar Iraqi oil spoils.
In the most crass and brazen manner, the Journal has
spelled out the criminal calculations that dominate the Bush administration
and Wall Street: the looting of Iraq and the region of its oil
spoils, the use of some of the spoils to pay off its accomplices,
and the military suppression of the aspirations of the regions
people for liberation from national and economic oppression.
In return for joining the US attack, the Turkish military would
be rewarded with control over Kurdish-populated northern Iraq,
where a degree of autonomy currently exists, and a cut of the
oil proceeds.
As for the badly needed cash, it was to consist
of $6 billion in aid, followed by $24 billion in credits, all
on the condition that the Turkish government imposed the demands
of the International Monetary Fund, strongly influenced by the
US, for a privatization program and cuts in its national budget.
These measures would of course require further devastating cuts
to jobs and social programs in a country where most people live
in cruel poverty, with an average monthly income for a worker
of less than 150 euros.
See Also:
The Bush administration, Turkey and democracy
[7 March 2003]
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