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Adding fuel to the Mideast fire: US unveils huge arms package
By Patrick Martin
1 August 2007
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The Bush administration dispatched Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates to the Middle East
Monday after announcing plans to funnel a staggering quantity
of US military aid to various client regimes in the region. A
total of $63 billion in arms will be sold or supplied to Israel,
Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and five Persian Gulf sheikdoms.
The arms deal breaks new ground for the US arms industry, which
will now supply missile defense systems, early warning radars,
equipment for smart weapons, and other high-tech components
that previously have been withheld from the Arab states in order
to guarantee Israeli military superiority.
The giant arms package is another sign of the pernicious combination
of militarism and recklessness that characterizes American policy
in the Middle East. It is also, at least in part, a response to
the desperate crisis brought on by the failed US occupation of
Iraq. The one constant in Washingtons reaction to rising
political tensions and bloody eruptions throughout the region
is more military violence and killing.
The US is selling at least $20 billion in advanced weapons
systems to the Saudis and the five small Gulf states that are
effectively US protectoratesKuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, the
United Arab Emirates and Oman. The deal has a dual purpose: to
build up the military power of the Arab states against Iran and
to bribe the Gulf rulers to provide at least a modicum of support
for the US-imposed stooge regime in Iraq.
In order to assuage Israeli opposition to the proposed sale
of high-tech weapons to the Arab states, the Bush administration
agreed to a ten-year extension of US military subsidies to Israel,
at a cost of $30 billiona 25 percent increase over the current
rate. And to maintain the appearance of balance in US policy,
Washington will supply another $13 billion in weapons and military
aid to Egypt and Jordan.
The arms and military aid package is yet another exposure of
the lies of the Bush administration, which claims to be waging
war for democracy in the Middle East while it arms to the teeth
the various hereditary monarchs, military dictators and oil sheiks
who rule over more than 100 million people and deprive them of
any political rights.
To a large extent, the arms deal is a direct effort to prop
up these antidemocratic rulers against their own people, who despise
them for their corruption and tyranny and their subservience to
American imperialism.
The trip by Rice and Gates underscores the growing recognition
even in the highest circles of the Bush administration that the
war in Iraq has produced a strategic disaster. The Maliki regime
in Baghdad has little authority even in its own country, and it
can hardly serve as a counterweight to Iran, the traditional role
played by Iraq for nearly 40 years under the Baathist dictatorship.
None of the Gulf Arab states can serve as a guarantor of US
security interests in the oil-rich region. The five sheikdoms
are too small and weak, while Saudi Arabia, with a population
comparable to Iraqs, is saddled with a grossly corrupt semi-feudal
ruling family that is incapable of any serious military effort
and faces a restive Shia minority inhabiting the main centers
of oil production.
Supplying a huge volume of advanced weapons to these unstable
monarchies does little to resolve the strategic problem facing
US imperialism. It could even exacerbate the crisis in the event
that some or all of the feudal rulers are overthrown and replaced
by regimes less amenable to US dictates.
Rice and Gates met with officials from Egypt, Jordan and the
six Persian Gulf states on Tuesday at the Egyptian resort of Sharm
el-Sheikh. Rice reiterated, in the course of several contacts
with the press, that Iran was the single most important
strategic challenge facing the US in the Middle East. McClatchy
Newspapers noted the bizarre character of this assertion, since
taken literally, Rices comments place US worries about
Iran ahead of concerns over the war in Iraq.
The effort to demonize the Iranian regime is part and parcel
of the campaign to dragoon the Arab states behind the US occupation
regime in Baghdad. The Gulf sheikdoms have made it clear that
they regard the Maliki government as an Iranian proxy, and Saudi
Arabia has been providing support, both financially and in terms
of manpower, for the Sunni insurgents, particularly in the western
province of Anbar on the Iraqi-Saudi border.
By focusing on what Rice called Irans destabilizing
activities, the Bush administration hopes to convince the
Gulf states that the US will never permit an Iranian-dominated
Iraq and will do whatever is required to hold onto the territory
it invaded in 2003. The Sharm el-Sheikh talks produced little,
however, beyond a statement that repeated previous verbal commitments
to continue to support Iraq.
Secretary of Defense Gates touched on the greatest fear of
the US stooge regimes in the Persian Gulf and throughout the Middle
Eastthat the backlash against the Iraq war among the American
people could hamstring future US military operations in the region,
putting a question mark over the 60-year-old arrangement under
which Washington ensures the security of the oil despots in return
for guaranteed access to the worlds largest petroleum reserves.
There clearly is concern on the part of the Egyptians,
and I think it probably represents concern elsewhere in the region,
that the United States will somehow withdraw precipitously from
Iraq, or in some way that is destabilizing to the entire region,
Gates told reporters after meeting with Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak.
Gates said that the Bush administration would proceed with
the understanding that this needs to be done carefully and
not leave Iraq in chaos. The remark is extraordinary, since
it essentially concedes what is generally recognized throughout
the world but never officially acknowledged in Washingtonthat
American imperialism is facing a catastrophic defeat in Iraq and
is now seeking to salvage what it can.
A key element in the arms deal is the agreement by Israel to
the supply of weapons such as AIM-9X air-to-air missiles for Saudi
and Egyptian fighter aircraft. In 1986, when a similar arms deal
was announcedfor similar political reasons, namely to bolster
the Gulf states at the height of the Iran-Iraq Warthe Israeli
government opposed the deal and, using its allies in the US Congress,
prevailed on the Reagan administration to drop some weapons systems
from the aid package.
Deputy Secretary of State Nicholas Burns told reporters in
a conference call that the Israeli cabinet decided Sunday to drop
its longstanding opposition to the sale of high-tech weapons to
the Arab states. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert declared,
We understand the need of the United States to support the
Arab moderate states, and there is a need for a united front between
the US and us regarding Iran.
In what amounts to a quid pro quo, the Bush administration
agreed to raise the annual military subsidy to Israel from the
current $2.4 billion a year to $3 billion, and extend the support
through 2017.
A major factor in the shift by Israel is the debacle of Olmerts
war last summer against Hezbollah, which laid waste to much of
southern Lebanon but failed either to cripple the Shiite militia
or demonstrate Israeli military dominance. This was followed by
the seizure of power in Gaza by Hamas, another radical Islamic
party allied with Iran, albeit more loosely than Hezbollah.
The Iranian defense minister, brigadier general Mostaffa Mohammad
Najjar, pointed to the influence of the US military-industrial
complex, saying the US government was trying to create a
false arms race in order to keep their weapons factories up and
running. This is certainly an element in the decision, since
the armaments industry remains one of the last bastions of support
for the Bush administration.
Democratic congressmen who are closest to the Zionist lobby,
including House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Tom Lantos,
issued statements questioning the deal, largely on the grounds
that it threatened to undermine Israeli security. But Rice reassured
such critics, saying that the administration was responsive
to everyones concerns that there not be any shift in the
military balance between the parties in the region.
Such comments only underscore the insoluble contradictions
in the Bush administrations foreign policy. By destroying
the regime of Saddam Hussein, the most powerful Arab state outside
of Egypt, the US has smashed the military balance in the region
and set in motion events that it cannot control.
In keeping with the pattern ever since it took office, the
Bush administration is responding to the problems created by its
program of military aggression by escalating the level of violence.
In the face of the debacle in Iraq, it is preparing for a war
with Iran that could engulf the entire Middle East.
See Also:
Humanitarian disaster produced
by US invasion: Oxfam reports one-third of Iraqis in need of emergency
aid
[31 July 2007]
International conference offers
no solution to Iraqi refugee crisis
[30 July 2007]
The US adopts belligerent
posture in Baghdad talks with Iran
[26 July 2007]
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