The Real
But Unspoken
Reasons For
The Iraq War
From Independent Media Center
www.indymedia.org:8081
2-3-3
- Summary
-
- Although completely suppressed in the U.S.
media, the answer to the Iraq enigma is simple yet shocking - it
an an oil CURRENCY war. The Real Reason for this upcoming war is
this administration's goal of preventing further OPEC momentum
towards the euro as an oil transaction currency standard. However,
in order to pre-empt OPEC, they need to gain geo-strategic control
of Iraq along with its 2nd largest proven oil reserves. This
lengthy essay will discuss the macroeconomics of the "petro-dollar"
and the unpublicized but real threat to U.S. economic hegemony
from the euro as an alternative oil transaction currency.
-
-
-
THE REAL REASONS FOR THE UPCOMING WAR IN IRAQ
-
Macroeconomic
and Geostrategic Analysis of the Unspoken Truth
By W.
Clark
wrc92@aol.com
-
- "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free,
it expects what never was and never will be ... The People cannot
be safe without information. When the press is free, and every man
is able to read, all is safe."
-
- Those words by Thomas Jefferson embody the
unfortunate state of affairs that have beset our nation. As our
government prepares to go to war with Iraq, our country seems
unable to answer even the most basic questions about this war.
First, why is there virtually no international support to topple
Saddam? If Iraq's WMD program truly possessed the threat level
that President Bush has repeatedly purported, why is there no
international coalition to militarily disarm Saddam? Secondly,
despite over 300 unfettered U.N inspections to date, there has
been no evidence reported of a reconstituted Iraqi WMD program.
Third, and despite Bush's rhetoric, the CIA has not found any
links between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda. To the contrary, some
analysts believe it is far more likely Al Qaeda might acquire an
unsecured former Soviet Union Weapon(s) of Mass Destruction, or
potentially from sympathizers within a destabilized Pakistan.
-
- Moreover, immediately following Congress's
vote on the Iraq Resolution, we suddenly became aware of North
Korea's nuclear program violations. Kim Jong Il is processing
uranium in order to produce nuclear weapons this year. President
Bush has not provided a rationale answer as to why Saddam's
seemingly dormant WMD program possesses a more imminent threat
that North Korea's active program? Strangely, Donald Rumsfeld
suggested that if Saddam were "exiled" we could avoid an Iraq war?
Confused yet? Well, I'm going to give their game away - the core
driver for toppling Saddam is actually the euro currency, the â,.
-
- Although completely suppressed in the U.S.
media, the answer to the Iraq enigma is simple yet shocking. The
upcoming war in Iraq war is mostly about how the ruling class at
Langley and the Bush oligarchy view hydrocarbons at the
geo-strategic level, and the overarching macroeconomic threats to
the U.S. dollar from the euro. The Real Reason for this upcoming
war is this administration's goal of preventing further OPEC
momentum towards the euro as an oil transaction currency standard.
However, in order to pre-empt OPEC, they need to gain
geo-strategic control of Iraq along with its 2nd largest proven
oil reserves.
-
- This lengthy essay will discuss the
macroeconomics of the "petro-dollar" and the unpublicized but real
threat to U.S. economic hegemony from the euro as an alternative
oil transaction currency. The following is how an astute and
anonymous friend alluded to the unspoken truth about this upcoming
war with Iraq...
-
- "The Federal Reserve's greatest nightmare is
that OPEC will switch its international transactions from a dollar
standard to a euro standard. Iraq actually made this switch in
Nov. 2000 (when the euro was worth around 80 cents), and has
actually made off like a bandit considering the dollar's steady
depreciation against the euro." (Note: the dollar declined 15%
against the euro in 2002.)
-
- "The real reason the Bush administration wants
a puppet government in Iraq - or more importantly, the reason why
the corporate-military-industrial network conglomerate wants a
puppet government in Iraq - is so that it will revert back to a
dollar standard and stay that way." (While also hoping to veto any
wider OPEC momentum towards the euro, especially from Iran - the
2nd largest OPEC producer who is actively discussing a switch to
euros for its oil exports).
-
- Furthermore, despite Saudi Arabia being our
'client state,' the Saudi regime appears increasingly weak/
threatened from massive civil unrest. Some analysts believe a
"Saudi Revolution" might be plausible in the aftermath of an
unpopular U.S. invasion of Iraq (ie. Iran circa 1979) (1).
Undoubtedly, the Bush administration is acutely aware of these
risks. Hence, the neo conservative framework entails a large and
permanent military presence in the Persian Gulf region in a post
Saddam era, just in case we need to surround and grab Saudi's oil
fields in the event of a coup by an anti-western group. But first
back to Iraq.
-
- "Saddam sealed his fate when he decided to
switch to the euro in late 2000 (and later converted his $10
billion reserve fund at the U.N. to euros) - at that point,
another manufactured Gulf War become inevitable under Bush II.
Only the most extreme circumstances could possibly stop that now
and I strongly doubt anything can - short of Saddam getting
replaced with a pliant regime."
-
- Big Picture Perspective: Everything else aside
from the reserve currency and the Saudi/Iran oil issues (i.e.
domestic political issues and international criticism) is
peripheral and of marginal consequence to this administration.
Further, the dollar-euro threat is powerful enough that they'll
rather risk much of the economic backlash in the short-term to
stave off the long-term dollar crash of an OPEC transaction
standard change from dollars to euros. All of this fits into the
broader Great Game that encompasses Russia, India, China."
-
- This information about Iraq's oil currency is
censored by the U.S. media as well as the Bush administration &
Federal Reserve as the truth could potentially curtail both
investor and consumer confidence, reduce consumer borrowing/
spending, create political pressure to form a new energy policy
that slowly weans us off middle-eastern oil, and of course stop
our march towards war in Iraq. This quasi "state secret" can be
found on a Radio Free Europe article discussing Saddam's switch
for his oil sales from dollars to the euros on Nov. 6, 2000 (2).
-
-
- "Baghdad's switch from the dollar to the euro
for oil trading is intended to rebuke Washington's hard-line on
sanctions and encourage Europeans to challenge it. But the
political message will cost Iraq millions in lost revenue. RFE/RL
correspondent Charles Recknagel looks at what Baghdad will gain
and lose, and the impact of the decision to go with the European
currency."
-
-
- At the time of the switch many analysts were
surprised that Saddam was willing to give up millions in oil
revenue for what appeared to be a political statement. However,
contrary to one of the main points of this November 2000 article,
the steady depreciation of the dollar versus the euro since late
2001 means that Iraq has profited handsomely from the switch in
their reserve and transaction currencies. The euro has gained
roughly 17% against the dollar in that time, which also applies to
the $10 billion in Iraq's U.N. "oil for food" reserve fund that
was previously held in dollars has also gained that same percent
value since the switch. What would happen if OPEC made a sudden
switch to euros, as opposed to a gradual transition?
-
- "Otherwise, the effect of an OPEC switch to
the euro would be that oil-consuming nations would have to flush
dollars out of their (central bank) reserve funds and replace
these with euros. The dollar would crash anywhere from 20-40% in
value and the consequences would be those one could expect from
any currency collapse and massive inflation (think Argentina
currency crisis, for example). You'd have foreign funds stream out
of the U.S. stock markets and dollar denominated assets, there'd
surely be a run on the banks much like the 1930s, the current
account deficit would become unserviceable, the budget deficit
would go into default, and so on. Your basic 3rd world economic
crisis scenario.
-
- The United States economy is intimately tied
to the dollar's role as reserve currency. This doesn't mean that
the U.S. couldn't function otherwise, but that the transition
would have to be gradual to avoid such dislocations (and the
ultimate result of this would probably be the U.S. and the E.U.
switching roles in the global economy)."
-
- In the aftermath of toppling Saddam it is
clear the U.S. will keep a large and permanent military force in
the Persian Gulf. Indeed, there is no "exit strategy" in Iraq, as
the military will be needed to protect the newly installed Iraqi
regime, and perhaps send a message to other OPEC producers that
they might receive "regime change" if they too move to euros for
their oil exportsâ¤.
-
- Another underreported story from this summer
regarding the other OPEC 'Axis of Evil' country and their interest
in the selling oil in euros, Iran. (3)
-
-
-
- "Iran's proposal to receive payments for crude
oil sales to Europe in euros instead of U.S. dollars is based
primarily on economics, Iranian and industry sources said. But
politics are still likely to be a factor in any decision, they
said, as Iran uses the opportunity to hit back at the U.S.
government, which recently labeled it part of an "axis of evil."
-
- The proposal, which is now being reviewed by
the Central Bank of Iran, is likely to be approved if presented to
the country's parliament, a parliamentary representative
said."There is a very good chance MPs will agree to this idea
...now that the euro is stronger, it is more logical," the
parliamentary representative said."
-
- More over, and perhaps most telling, during
2002 the majority of reserve funds in Iran's central bank have
been shifted to euros. It appears imminent that Iran intends to
switch to euros for their oil currency (4)
-
-
- "More than half of the country's assets in the
Forex Reserve Fund have been converted to euro, a member of the
Parliament Development Commission, Mohammad Abasspour announced.
He noted that higher parity rate of euro against the US dollar
will give the Asian countries, particularly oil exporters, a
chance to usher in a new chapter in ties with European Union's
member countries.
-
- He said that the United States dominates other
countries through its currency, noting that given the superiority
of the dollar against other hard currencies, the US monopolizes
global trade. The lawmaker expressed hope that the competition
between euro and dollar would eliminate the monopoly in global
trade."
-
- Indeed, after toppling Saddam, this
administration may decide that Iran is the next target in the "war
on terror." Iran's interest in switching to the euro as their
standard transaction currency for oil exports is well documented.
Perhaps this recent MSNBC article illustrates the objectives of
the neo conservatives (5).
-
-
- "While still wrangling over how to overthrow
Iraq's Saddam Hussein, the Bush administration is already looking
for other targets. President Bush has called for the ouster of
Palestinian leader Yasir Arafat. Now some in the administrationâ¤"and
allies at D.C. think tanksâ¤"are eyeing Iran and even Saudi
Arabia. As one senior British official put it: "Everyone wants to
go to Baghdad. Real men want to go to Tehran."
-
- Aside from these political risks regarding
Saudi Arabia and Iran, another risk factor isactually Japan.
Perhaps the biggest gamble in a protracted Iraq war may be Japan's
weak economy (6). If the war creates prolonged oil high prices
($45 per barrel over several months), or a short but massive oil
price spike ($80 to $100 per barrel), some analysts believe
Japan's fragile economy would collapse. Japan is quite
hypersensitive to oil prices, and if its banks default, the
collapse of the second largest economy would set in motion a
sequence of events that would prove devastating to the U.S.
economy. Indeed, Japan's fall in an Iraq war could create the
economic dislocations that begin in the Pacific Rim but quickly
spread to Europe and Russia. The Russian government lacks the
controls to thwart a disorderly run on the dollar, and such an
event could ultimately force and OPEC switch to euros.
-
- Additionally, other risks might arise if the
Iraq war goes poorly or becomes prolonged, as it is possible that
civil unrest may unfold in Kuwait or other OPEC members including
Venezuela, as the latter may switch to euros just as Saddam did in
November 2000. Thereby fostering the very situation this
administration is trying to prevent, another OPEC member switching
to euros as their oil transaction currency.
-
- Incidentally, the final "Axis of Evil"
country, North Korea, recently decided to officially drop the
dollar and begin using euros for trade, effective Dec. 7, 2002
(7). Unlike the OPEC-producers, their switch will have negligible
economic impact, but it illustrates the geopolitical fallout of
the President Bush's harsh rhetoric. Much more troubling is North
Korea's recent action following the oil embargo of their country.
They are in dire need of oil and food; and in an act of
desperation they have re-activated their pre-1994 nuclear program.
Processing uranium appears to be taking place at a rapid pace, and
it appears their strategy is to prompt negotiations with the U.S.
regarding food and oil. The CIA estimates that North Korea could
produce 4-6 nuclear weapons by the second half of 2003.
Ironically, this crisis over North Korea's nuclear program further
confirms the fraudulent premise for which this war with Saddam was
entirely contrived.
-
- Unfortunately, neo conservatives such as
George Bush, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz and
Richard Pearle fail to grasp that Newton's Law applies equally to
both physics and the geo-political sphere as well:
-
- "For every action there is an equal but
opposite reaction."
-
- During the 1990s the world viewed the U.S. as
a rather self-absorbed but essentially benevolent superpower.
Military actions in Iraq (90-91' & 98'), Serbia and Kosovo (99')
were undertaken with both U.N. and NATO cooperation and thus
afforded international legitimacy. President Clinton also worked
to reduce tensions in Northern Ireland and attempted to negotiate
a resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
-
- However, in both the pre and post 9/11
intervals, the "America first" policies of the Bush
administration, with its unwillingness to honor International
Treaties, along with their aggressive militarisation of foreign
policy, has significantly damaged our reputation abroad. Following
9/11, it appears that President Bush's "warmongering rhetoric" has
created global tensions - as we are now viewed as a belligerent
superpower willing to apply unilateral military force without U.N.
approval.Lamentably, the tremendous amount of international
sympathy that we witnessed in the immediate aftermath of the
September 11th tragedy has been replaced with fear and anger at
our government. This administration's bellicosity haschanged the
worldview, and "anti-Americanism" is proliferating even among our
closest allies (8).
-
- Even more alarming, and completely unreported
in the U.S media, are some monetary shifts in the reserve funds of
foreign governments away from the dollar with movements towards
the euro (China, Venezuela, some OPEC producers and last week
Russia flushed some of their dollars for euros) (9). It appears
that the world community may lack faith in the Bush
administration's economic policies, and along with OPEC, seems
poised to respond with economic retribution if the U.S. government
is regarded as an uncontrollable and dangerous superpower. The
plausibility of abandoning the dollar standard for the euro is
growing. An interesting U.K. article outlines the dynamics and the
potential outcomes
-
- ('Beyond Bush's Unilateralism: Another
Bi-Polar World or A New Era of Win-Win?')(10)
-
-
- "The most likely end to US hegemony may come
about through a combination of high oil prices (brought about by
US foreign policies toward the Middle East) and deeper devaluation
of the US dollar (expected by many economists). Some elements of
this scenario:
-
- 1) US global over-reach in the "war on
terrorism" already leading to deficits as far as the eye can see
-- combined with historically-high US trade deficits - lead to a
further run on the dollar. This and the stock market doldrums make
the US less attractive to the world's capital.
-
- 2) More developing countries follow the lead
of Venezuela and China in diversifying their currency reserves
away from dollars and balanced with euros. Such a shift in
dollar-euro holdings in Latin America and Asia could keep the
dollar and euro close to parity.
-
- 3) OPEC could act on some of its internal
discussions and decide (after concerted buying of euros in the
open market) to announce at a future meeting in Vienna that OPEC's
oil will be re-denominated in euros, or even a new oil-backed
currency of their own. A US attack on Iraq sends oil to â,40 per
barrel.
-
- 4) The Bush Administration's efforts to
control the domestic political agenda backfires. Damage over the
intelligence failures prior to 9/11 and warnings of imminent new
terrorist attacks precipitate a further stock market slide.
-
- 5) All efforts by Democrats and the 57% of the
US public to shift energy policy toward renewables, efficiency,
standards, higher gas taxes, etc. are blocked by the Bush
Administration and its fossil fuel industry supporters. Thus, the
USA remains vulnerable to energy supply and price shocks.
-
- 6) The EU recognizes its own economic and
political power as the euro rises further and becomes the world's
other reserve currency. The G-8 pegs the euro and dollar into a
trading band -- removing these two powerful currencies from
speculators trading screens (a "win-win" for everyone!). Tony
Blair persuades Brits of this larger reason for the UK to join the
euro.
-
- 7) Developing countries lacking dollars or
"hard" currencies follow Venezuela's lead and begin bartering
their undervalued commodities directly with each other in
computerized swaps and counter trade deals. President Chavez has
inked 13 such country barter deals on its oil, e.g., with Cuba in
exchange for Cuban health paramedics who are setting up clinics in
rural Venezuelan villages.
-
- "The result of this scenario? The USA could no
longer run its huge current account trade deficits or continue to
wage open-ended global war on terrorism or evil. The USA ceases
pursuing unilateralist policies. A new US administration begins to
return to its multilateralist tradition, ceases its obstruction
and rejoins the UN and pursues more realistic international
cooperation."
-
- As for the events currently taking place in
Venezuela, items #2 and #7 on the above list may allude to why the
Bush administration quickly endorsed the failed military-led coup
of Hugo Chavez in April 2002. Although the coup collapsed after 2
days, various reports suggest the CIA and a rather embarrassed
Bush administration approved and may have been actively involved
with the civilian/military coup plotters. (11)
-
-
- "George W. Bush's administration was the
failed coup's primary loser, underscoring its bankrupt hemispheric
policy. Now it is slowly filtering out that in recent months White
Houseofficials met with key coup figures, including Carmona.
Although the administration insists that it explicitly objected to
any extra-constitutional action to remove Chavez, comments by
senior U.S. officials did little to convey this."
-
- "The CIA's role in a 1971 Chilean strike could
have served as the working model for generating economic and
social instability in order to topple Chavez. In the truckers'
strike of that year, the agency secretly orchestrated and financed
the artificial prolongation of a contrived work stoppage in order
to economically asphyxiate the leftist Salvador Allende
government."
-
- "This scenario would have had CIA operatives
acting in liaison with the Venezuelan military, as well as with
opposition business and labor leaders, to convert a relatively
minor afternoon-long work stoppage by senior management into a
nearly successful coup de grace."
-
- Interestingly, according to an article by
Michael Ruppert, Venezuelan's ambassador Francisco Mieres-Lopez
apparently floated the idea of switching to the euro as their oil
currency standard approximately one year before the failed coup
attempt... Furthermore, there is evidence that the CIA is still
active in its attempts to overthrow the democratically elected
Chavez administration. In fact, this past December a Uruguayan
government official recently exposed the ongoing covert CIA
operations in Venezuela (12):
-
-
- "Uruguayan EP-FA congressman Jose Bayardi says
he has information that far-reaching plan have been put into place
by the CIA and other North American intelligence agencies
tooverthrow Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez Frias"
-
- "Bayardi says he has received copies of
top-secret communications between the Bush administration in
Washington and the government of Uruguay requesting the latter's
cooperation to support white collar executives and trade union
activists to "break down levels of intransigence within the Chavez
Frias administration"
-
- Venezuela is the fourth largest producer of
oil, and the corporate elites whose political power runs
unfettered in the Bush/Cheney oligarchy appear interested in
privatizing Venezuela's oil industry. Furthermore, the
establishment might be concerned that Chavez's "barter deals" with
12 Latin American countries and Cuba are effectively cutting the
U.S. dollar out of the vital oil transaction currency cycle.
Commodities are being traded among these countries in exchange for
Venezuela's oil, thereby reducing reliance on fiat dollars. If
these unique oil transactions proliferate, they could create more
devaluation pressure on the dollar. Continuing attempts by the CIA
to remove Hugo Chavez appear likely.
-
- The U.S. economy has acquired several
problems, including as our record-high trade account deficit
(almost 5% of GDP), $6.3 trillion dollar deficit (55% of GDP), and
the recent return to annual budget deficits in the hundreds of
billions. These are factors that would devalue the currency of any
nation under the "old rules." Why is the dollar still strong
despite these structural flaws? Well, the elites understand that
the strength of the dollar does not merely rest on our economic
output per se. The dollar posses two unique advantages relative to
all other hard currencies.
-
- The reality is that the strength of the dollar
since 1945 rests on being the international reserve currency and
thus fiat currency for global oil transactions (ie. "petro-dollar").
The U.S. prints hundreds of billions of these fiat petro-dollars,
which are then used by nation states to purchase oil/energy from
OPEC producers (except Iraq, to some degree Venezuela, and perhaps
Iran in the near future). These petro-dollars are then re-cycled
from OPEC back into the U.S. via Treasury Bills or other
dollar-denominated assets such as U.S. stocks, real estate, etc.
-
- The "old rules" for valuation of our currency
and economic power were based on our flexible market, free flow of
trade goods, high per worker productivity, manufacturing
output/trade surpluses, government oversight of accounting
methodologies (ie. SEC), developed infrastructure, education
system, and of course total cash flow and profitability. While
many of these factors remain present, over the last two decades we
have diluted some of these "safe harbor" fundamentals. Despite
imbalances and some structural problems that are escalating within
the U.S. economy, the dollar as the fiat oil currency created "new
rules". The following exerts from an Asia Times article discusses
the virtues of our fiat oil currency and dollar hegemony (or vices
from the perspective of developing nations, whose debt is
denominated in dollars). (13)
-
-
- "Ever since 1971, when US president Richard
Nixon took the dollar off the gold standard (at $35 per ounce)
that had been agreed to at the Bretton Woods Conference at the end
of World War II, the dollar has been a global monetary instrument
that the United States, and only the United States, can produce by
fiat. The dollar, now a fiat currency, is at a 16-year
trade-weighted high despite record US current-account deficits and
the status of the US as the leading debtor nation. The US national
debt as of April 4 was $6.021 trillion against a gross domestic
product (GDP) of $9 trillion."
-
- "World trade is now a game in which the US
produces dollars and the rest of the world produces things that
dollars can buy. The world's interlinked economies no longer trade
to capture a comparative advantage; they compete in exports to
capture needed dollars to service dollar-denominated foreign debts
and to accumulate dollar reserves to sustain the exchange value of
their domestic currencies.To prevent speculative and manipulative
attacks on their currencies, the world's central banks must
acquire and hold dollar reserves in corresponding amounts to their
currencies in circulation. The higher the market pressure to
devalue a particular currency, the more dollar reserves its
central bank must hold. This creates a built-in support for a
strong dollar that in turn forces the world's central banks to
acquire and hold more dollar reserves, making it stronger.
-
- This phenomenon is known as dollar hegemony,
which is created by the geopolitically constructed peculiarity
that critical commodities, most notably oil, are denominated in
dollars. Everyone accepts dollars because dollars can buy oil. The
recycling of petro-dollars is the price the US has extracted from
oil-producing countries for US tolerance of the oil-exporting
cartel since 1973."
-
- "By definition, dollar reserves must be
invested in US assets, creating a capital-accounts surplus for the
US economy. Even after a year of sharp correction, US stock
valuation is still at a 25-year high and trading at a 56 percent
premium compared with emerging markets.""The US capital-account
surplus in turn finances the US trade deficit. Moreover, any
asset, regardless of location, that is denominated in dollars is a
US asset in essence. When oil is denominated in dollars through US
state action and the dollar is a fiat currency,the US essentially
owns the world's oil for free. And the more the US prints
greenbacks, the higher the price of US assets will rise. Thus a
strong-dollar policy gives the US a double win."
-
- This unique geo-political agreement with Saudi
Arabia has worked to our favor for the past 30 years, as this
arrangement has raised the entire asset value of all dollar
denominated assets/properties, and allowed the Federal Reserve to
create a truly massive debt and credit expansion (or 'credit
bubble' in the view of some economists). These current structural
imbalances in the U.S. economy are sustainable as long as:
-
- 1)Nations continue to demand and purchase oil
for their energy/survival needs
-
- 2)The fiat reserve currency for global oil
transactions remain the U.S. dollar (and dollar only)
-
- These underlying factors, along with the "safe
harbor" reputation of U.S. investments afforded by the dollar's
reserve currency status propelled the U.S. to economic and
military hegemony in the post-World War II period. However, the
introduction of the euro is a significant new factor, and appears
to be the primary threat to U.S. economic hegemony.
-
- More over, in December 2002 ten additional
countries were approved for full membership into the E.U. In 2004
this will result in an aggregate GDP of $9.6 trillion and 450
million people, directly competing with the U.S. economy ($10.5
trillion GDP, 280 million people).
-
- Especially interesting is a speech given by Mr
Javad Yarjani, the Head of OPEC's Petroleum Market Analysis
Department, in a visit to Spain (April 2002). He speech dealt
entirely on the subject of OPEC oil transaction currency standard
with respect to both the dollar and the euro. The following exerts
from this OPEC executive provide insights into the conditions that
would create momentum for an OPEC currency switch to the euro.
Indeed, his candid analysis warrants careful consideration given
that two of the requisite variables he outlines for the switch
have taken place since this speech in early 2002. These vital
stories are discussed in the European media, but have been
censored by our own mass media (14)
-
-
- "The question that comes to mind is whether
the euro will establish itself in world financial markets, thus
challenging the supremacy of the US dollar, and consequently
trigger a change in the dollar's dominance in oil markets. As we
all know, the mighty dollar has reigned supreme since 1945, and in
the last few years has even gained more ground with the economic
dominance of the United States, a situation that may not change in
the near future. By the late 90s, more than four-fifths of all
foreign exchange transactions, and half of all world exports, were
denominated in dollars. In addition, the US currency accounts for
about two thirds of all official exchange reserves. The world's
dependency on US dollars to pay for trade has seen countries bound
to dollar reserves, which are disproportionably higher than
America's share in global output. The share of the dollar in the
denomination of world trade is also much higher than the share of
the US in world trade.
-
- Having said that, it is worthwhile to note
that in the long run the euro is not at such a disadvantage versus
the dollar when one compares the relative sizes of the economies
involved, especially given the EU enlargement plans. Moreover, the
Euro-zone has a bigger share of global trade than the US and while
the US has a huge current account deficit, the euro area has a
more, or balanced, external accounts position. One of the more
compelling arguments for keeping oil pricing and payments in
dollars has been that the US remains a large importer of oil,
despite being a substantial crude producer itself. However,
looking at the statistics of crude oil exports, one notes that the
Euro-zone is an even larger importer of oil and petroleum products
than the US."
-
- "From the EU's point of view, it is clear that
Europe would prefer to see payments for oil shift from the dollar
to the euro, which effectively removed the currency risk. It would
also increase demand for the euro and thus help raise its value.
Moreover, since oil is such an important commodity in global
trade, in term of value, if pricing were to shift to the euro, it
could provide a boost to the global acceptability of the single
currency. There is also very strong trade links between OPEC
Member Countries (MCs) and the Euro-zone, with more than 45
percent of total merchandise imports of OPEC MCs coming from the
countries of the Euro-zone, while OPEC MCs are main suppliers of
oil and crude oil products to Europe."
-
- "Of major importance to the ultimate success
of the euro, in terms of the oil pricing, will be if Europe's two
major oil producers â¤" the United Kingdom and Norway join the
single currency. Naturally, the future integration of these two
countries into the Euro-zone and Europe will be important
considering they are the region's two major oil producers in the
North Sea, which is home to the international crude oil benchmark,
Brent. This might create a momentum to shift the oil pricing
system to euros."
-
- "In the short-term, OPEC MCs, with possibly a
few exceptions, are expected to continue to accept payment in
dollars. Nevertheless, I believe that OPEC will not discount
entirely the possibility of adopting euro pricing and payments in
the future. The Organization, like many other financial houses at
present, is also assessing how the euro will settle into its life
as a new currency. The critical question for market players is the
overall value and stability of the euro, and whether other
countries within the Union will adopt the single currency."
-
- Should the euro challenge the dollar in
strength, which essentially could include it in the denomination
of the oil bill, it could be that a system may emerge which
benefits more countries in the long-term. Perhaps with increased
European integration and a strong European economy, this may
become a reality. Time may be on your side. I wish the euro every
success."
-
- Based on this important speech, momentum for
OPEC to consider switching to the euro will grow once the E.U.
expands in May 2004 to 450 million people with the inclusion of 10
additional member states. The aggregate GDP will increase from $7
trillion to $9.6 trillion. This enlarged E.U. will be an oil
consuming purchasing population 33% larger than the U.S., and over
half of OPEC crude oil will be sold to the EU as of mid-2004. This
does not include other potential entrants such as the U.K.,
Norway, Denmark and Sweden. I should note that since this speech
the euro has been trading at parity or above the dollar since late
2002, and analysts predict the dollar will continue its downward
trending in 2003 relative to the euro.
-
- Further, if or when the U.K. adopts the euro
currency, that development could provide critical motivation for
OPEC to the make the transition to euros. It appears the final two
pivotal items that would create the OPEC transition to euros will
be based on if and when Norway's Brent crude is re-dominated in
euros, and when the U.K. adopts the euro. Regarding the later,
Tony Blair is lobbying heavily for the U.K. to adopt the euro, and
their adoption would seem imminent within this decade. Again, I
offer the following information from my astute acquaintance who
analyzes these matters very carefully regarding the euro:
-
- "The pivotal vote will probably be Sweden,
where approval this next autumn of adopting the euro also would
give momentum to the Danish government's strong desire to follow
suit. Polls in Denmark now indicate that the euro would pass with
a comfortable margin and Norwegian polls show a growing majority
in favor of EU membership. Indeed, with Norway having already
integrated most EU economic directives through the EEA partnership
and with their strongly appreciated currency, their accession to
the euro would not only be effortless, but of great economic
benefit.
-
- As go the Swedes, so probably will go the
Danes & Norwegians. It's the British who are the real obstacle to
building momentum for the euro as international transaction &
reserve currency. So long as the United Kingdom remains apart from
the euro, reducing exchange rate costs between the euro and the
British pound remains their obvious priority. British adoption (a
near-given in the long run) would mount significant pressure
toward repegging the Brent crude benchmark - which is traded on
the International Petroleum Exchange in London - and the
Norwegians would certainly have no objection whatsoever that I can
think of, whether or not they join the European Union."
-
- Finally, the maneuvers toward reducing the
global dominance of the dollar are already well underway and have
only reason to accelerate so far as I can see. An OPEC pricing
shift would seem rather unlikely prior 2004 - barring political
motivations (ie. motivations of OPEC members) or a disorderly
collapse of the dollar (ie. prolonged high oil prices due to Iraq
war causes Japanese bank collapse)- but appears quite viable to
take place before the end of the decade."
-
- In otherwords, around 2005, from an economic
and monetary perspectivem, it will be logical for OPEC to switch
to the euro for oil pricing. Of course that will devalue the
dollar, and hurt the US economy unless it begins making some
structual changes - or use its massive military power to force
events upon the OPEC states...
-
- Facing these potentialities, I hypothesize
that President Bush intends to topple Saddam in 2003 in a
pre-emptive attempt to initiate massive Iraqi oil production in
far excess of OPEC quotas, to reduce global oil prices, and
thereby dismantle OPEC'sprice controls. The end-goal of the
neo-conservatives is incredibly bold yet simple in purpose, to use
the "war on terror" as the premise to finally dissolve OPEC's
decision-making process, thus ultimately preventing the cartel's
inevitable switch to pricing oil in euros.
-
- How would the Bush administration break-up the
OPEC cartel's price controls in a post-Saddam Iraq? First, the
newly installed regime (apparently a U.S. General for the first
several months) will convert Iraq back to the dollar standard.
Next, with the U.S. military protecting the oil fields, the Bush
junta will undertake the necessary steps to rapidly increase
production of Iraq oil, quintupling Iraq's current output - and
well beyond OPEC's 2 million barrel per day quota.
-
- Dr. Nayyer Ali offers a succinct analysis of
how Iraq's underutilized oil reserves will not be a "profit-maker"
for the U.S. government, but it will serve as the crucial economic
instrument used by the Bush junta to leverage and hopefully
dissolve OPEC's price controls, thus causing the neo
conservative's long sought goal of collapsing the OPEC cartel
(15):
-
-
- "Despite this vast pool of oil, Iraq has never
produced at a level proportionate to the reserve base. Since the
Gulf War, Iraq's production has been limited by sanctions and
allowed sales under the oil for food program (by which Iraq has
sold 60 billion dollars worth of oil over the last 5 years) and
what else can be smuggled out. This amounts to less than 1 billion
barrels per year. If Iraq were reintegrated into the world
economy, it could allow massive investment in its oil sector and
boost output to 2.5 billion barrels per year, or about 7 million
barrels a day.
-
- Total world oil production is about 75 million
barrels, and OPEC combined produces about 25 million barrels.
-
- What would be the consequences of this? There
are two obvious things.
-
- First would be the collapse of OPEC, whose
strategy of limiting production to maximize price will have
finally reached its limit. An Iraq that can produce that much oil
will want to do so, and will not allow OPEC to limit it to 2
million barrels per day. If Iraq busts its quota, then who in OPEC
will give up 5 million barrels of production? No one could afford
to, and OPEC would die. This would lead to the second major
consequence, which is a collapse in the price of oil to the
10-dollar range per barrel. The world currently uses 25 billion
barrels per year, so a 15-dollar drop will save oil-consuming
nations 375 billion dollars in crude oil costs every year."
-
- "The Iraq war is not a moneymaker. But it
could be an OPEC breaker. That however is a long-term outcome that
will require Iraq to be successfully reconstituted into a
functioning state in which massive oil sector investment can take
place."
-
- The American people are largely oblivious to
the economic risks regarding President Bush's upcoming war. Not
only is Japan's economy at grave risk from a spike in oil prices,
but additional risks relate to Iran and Venezuela as well, either
of whom could move to the euros, thus providing further momentum
for OPEC to act on their "internal discussions" and switch to the
euro as the fiat currency for oil. The Bush administration
believes that by toppling Saddam they will remove the juggernaut,
thus allowing the US to control Iraqi's huge oil reserves, and
finally break-up and dissolve the 10 remaining countries in OPEC.
-
- This last issue is undoubtedly a significant
gamble even in the best-case scenario of a quick and relatively
painless war that topples Saddam and leaves Iraq's oil fields
intact. Undoubtedly, the OPEC cartel could feel threatened by the
Bush junta's stated goal of breaking-up OPEC's price controls
($22-$28 per barrel). Perhaps the Bush administration's ambitious
goal of flooding the oil market with Iraqi crude may work, but I
have doubts. Will OPEC simply tolerate quota-busting Iraqi oil
production, thus delivering to them a lesson in self-inflicted
hara-kiri (suicide)?
-
- Contrarily, OPEC could meet in Vienna and in
an act of self-preservation re-denominate the oil currency to the
euro. Such a decision by would mark the end of U.S. dollar
hegemony, and thus the end of our precarious economic superpower
status. Again, I offer the astute analysis of my expert friend
regarding the colossal gamble this administration is about to
undertake:
-
- "One of the dirty little secrets of today's
international order is that the rest of the globe could topple the
United States from its hegemonic status whenever they so choose
with a concerted abandonment of the dollar standard. This is
America's preeminent, inescapable Achilles Heel for now and the
foreseeable future.
-
- That such a course hasn't been pursued to date
bears more relation to the fact that other Westernized, highly
developed nations haven't any interest to undergo the great
disruptions which would follow - but it could assuredly take place
in the event that the consensus view coalesces of the United
States as any sort of 'rogue'nation. In other words, if the
dangers of American global hegemony are ever perceived as a
greater liability than the dangers of toppling the international
order (or, alternately, if an 'every man for himself' crisis as
discussed above spirals out of control and forces their hand). The
Bush administration and the neo conservative movement has set out
on a multiple-front course to ensure that this cannot take place,
in brief by a graduated assertion of military hegemony atop the
existent economic hegemony.
-
- The paradox I've illustrated with this one
narrow scenario is that the quixotic course itself may very well
bring about the feared outcome that it means to preempt. We shall
see!"
-
- Under this administration we have returned to
massive deficit spending, and the lack of strong SEC enforcement
has further eroded investor confidence. Regrettably, the flawed
economic and tax policies and of the Bush administration may be
exacerbating the weakness of the dollar, if not outright
accelerating some countries to diversify their central bank
reserve funds with euros as an alternative to the dollar. >From a
foreign policy perspective, the terminations of numerous
international treaties and disdain for international cooperation
via the UN and NATO have angered even our closest allies.
-
- Lastly, and despite President Bush's attempt
to use the threat of applying military force to OPEC producers who
may wish to switch to the euro for their oil payments, it appears
their belligerent neo conservative policies may paradoxically
bring about the dire outcome they hope to prevent - an OPEC
currency switch to euros.
-
- The American people are not aware of such
information due to the U.S. mass media, which has been reduced to
a handful of consumption/entertainment and profit-oriented
conglomerates that filter the flow of information in the U.S.
Indeed, the Internet provides the only source of unfiltered "real
news."
-
- Synopsis:
-
- It would appear that any attempt by OPEC
member states in the Middle East or Latin America to transition to
the euro as their oil transaction currency standard shall be met
with either overt U.S. military actions or covert U.S.
intelligence agency interventions. Under the guise of the
perpetual "war on terror" the Bush administration is manipulating
the American people about the unspoken but very real macroeconomic
reasons for this upcoming war with Iraq. This war in Iraq will
have nothing to with any threat from Saddam's old WMD program.
This war will be over the global currency of oil.
-
- Sadly, the U.S. has become largely ignorant
and complacent. Too many of us are willing to be ruled by fear and
lies, rather than by persuasion and truth. Will we allow our
government to initiate the dangerous "pre-emptive doctrine" by
waging an unpopular war in Iraq, while we refuse to acknowledge
that Saddam does not pose an imminent threat to the United States?
We seem unable to address the structural weakness of our economy
due to massive debt manipulation, unaffordable 2001 tax cuts,
massive current account deficits, trade deficits, corporate
accounting abuses, unsustainable credit expansion, near zero
personal savings, record personal indebtedness, and our dependence
and over consumption of cheap Middle Eastern oil. How much longer
can we reliably import our oil from middle eastern states that
dislike or despise us because of our biased foreign policy towards
Israel?
-
- Lastly, we must bear in mind Jefferson's
insistence that a free press is our best, and perhaps only
mechanism to protect democracy, and part of today's dilemma lies
within the U.S. media conglomerates that have failed to inform the
People.
-
- Regardless of whatever Dr. Blix finds or
doesn't find in Iraq regarding WMD, it appears that President Bush
is determined to pursue his "pre-emptive" imperialist war to
secure a large portion of the earth's remaining hydrocarbons, and
then use Iraq's underutilized oil to destroy the OPEC cartel. Will
this gamble work? Undeniably our nation may suffer not only from
economic retribution, but also from increased Al-Qaeda sponsored
terrorism as well. Will we stand idle and watch CNN, as our
government becomes an international pariah by discarding
International Law as it wages a unilateral war in Iraq?
-
- Is it morally defensible to deploy our brave
but naĂve young soldiers around the globe to enforce U.S. dollar
hegemony for global oil transactions - via the barrel of their
guns? Will we allow imperialist conquest in the Middle East to
feed our excessive energy consumption, while ignoring the
duplicitous overthrowing of a democratically elected government in
Latin America? Shall we accept the grave price of an unjust war
over the currency of oil? We must not stand silent and watchour
country become a 'rogue' superpower, relying on brute force,
thereby forcing the industrialized nations or OPEC to abandon the
dollar standard - thus with the mere stroke of a pen - slay the
U.S. Empire?
-
- Informed citizens believe this administration
is pushing us towards that dire outcome. Remaining silent is not
only misguided, but false patriotism.
-
- This need not be our fate. When will we demand
that our government begin the long and difficult journey towards
energy conservation, the development of renewable energy sources,
and sustained balanced budgets to allow real deficit reduction?
When will we repeal of the unaffordable 2001 tax cuts to create a
balanced budget, enforce corporate accounting laws, and
substantially reinvest in our manufacturing and export sectors to
move our economy from a trade account deficit position back into a
trade account surplus position? Undoubtedly, we must make these
and many more painful structural changes to our economy if we are
to restore our "safe harbor" investment status.
-
- Ultimately we will have to make sacrifices by
reducing our excessive energy consumption that we have become
accustomed to as a society. It is imperative that our government
also begins economic and monetary reforms immediately. We must
adopt our economy to accommodate the inevitable competition to the
dollar from the euro as an alternative international reserve
currency and oil transaction currency. The Bush administration's
seemingly entrenched political ideology appears quite incompatible
with these necessary economic reforms. Ultimately We the People
must demand a new and more responsible administration. We need
leaders who are willing to return balanced, conservative fiscal
policies, and to our traditions of engaging in multilateral
foreign policies while seeking broad international cooperation.
-
- It has been said that all wars are fought over
resources or ideology/religion. It appears that this
administration may soon add "currency wars" as a third paradigm. I
fear that the world community will not tolerate a U.S. Empire that
uses its military power to conquer sovereign nations who decide to
sell their oil products in euros instead of dollars. Likewise, if
President Bush pursues an essentially unilateral war against Iraq,
I suspect the historians will not be kind to his administration.
Their agenda is clear to the world community, but when will U.S.
patriots become cognizant of their modus operandi?
-
-
- "If you tell a lie big enough and keep
repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it."
-
- "The lie can be maintained only for such time
as the State can shield the people from the political, economic
and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally
important for the State to use all of its powers to repress
dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by
extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State."
-
- - Joseph Goebbels, German Minister of
Propaganda, 1933-1945
-
- END OF ESSAY
-
- ***********
-
- Background Information on Hydrocarbons
-
- To understand hydrocarbons and how we got to
this desperate place in Iraq, I have listed four articles in the
Reference Section from Michael Ruppert's controversial website:
'From the Wilderness.' Although some of Ruppert's articles are
overwrought from time to time, their research detailing the issues
of hydrocarbons, and the interplay between energy and the Bush
junta's perpetual "war on terror" is quite informative. Other than
the core driver of the dollar versus euro currency threat, the
other issue related to the upcoming war with Iraq appears related
to the Caspian Sea region. Since the mid-late 1990s the Caspian
Sea region of Central Asiawas thought to hold approx. 200 billion
barrels of untapped oil (the later would be comparable to Saudi
Arabia's reserve base)(16). Based on an early feasibility study by
Enron, the easiest and cheapest way to bring this oil to market
would be a pipeline from Kazakhstan, through Afghanistan to the
Pakistan border at Malta. In 1998 then CEO of Halliburton, Dick
Cheney, expressed much interest in building that pipeline.
-
- In fact, these oil reserves were a *central*
component of Vice President Cheney's energy plan released in May
2001. According to his report, the U.S. will import 90% of its oil
by 2020, and thus tapping into the reserves in the Caspian Sea
region was viewed as a strategic goal that would help meet our
growing energy demand, and also reduce our dependence on oil from
the Middle East (17). According to the French book, The Forbidden
Truth (18), the Bush administration ignored the U.N. sanctions
that had been imposed upon the Taliban and entered into
negotiations with the supposedly 'rogue regime' from February 2,
2001 to August 6, 2001. According to this book, the Taliban were
apparently not very cooperative based on the statements of
Pakistan's former ambassador, Mr. Naik. He reports that the U.S.
threatened a "military option" in the summer of 2001 if the
Taliban did not acquiesce to our demands. Fortuitous for the Bush
administration and Cheney's energy plan, Bin Laden delivered to us
9/11. The pre-positioned U.S. military; along with the CIA
providing cash to the Northern Alliance leaders, led the invasion
of Afghanistan and the Taliban were routed. The pro-western Karzai
government was ushered in. The pipeline project was now back on
track in early 2002, well, sort...
-
- After three exploratory wells were built and
analyzed, it was reported that the Caspian region holds only
approximately 10 to 20 billion barrels of oil (although it does
have a lot of natural gas) (16). The oil is also of poor quality,
with high sulfur content. Subsequently, several major companies
have now dropped their plans for the pipeline citing the massive
project was no longer profitable. Unfortunately, this recent
realization about the Caspian Sea region has serious implications
for the U.S., India, China, Asia and Europe, as the amount of
available hydrocarbons for industrialized and developing nations
has been decreased downward by 20%. (Globalestimates reduced from
1.2 trillion to approx. 1 trillion) (18, 19). The Bush
administration quickly turned its attention to a known quantity,
Iraq, with it proven reserves totaling 11% of the world's oil
reserves. Our greatest nemesis, Bin Laden, was quickly replaced
with our new public enemy #1, Saddam Hussein...
-
- For those who would like to review the impact
of depleting hydrocarbon reserves from the geo-political
perspective, and the potential ramifications to how this may
ultimately create an erosion of our civil liberties and democratic
processes, retired U.S. Special Forces officer Stan Goff offers a
sobering analysis in his essay: 'The Infinite War and Its Roots'
(20). Likewise, for those who wish to review the unspeakable
evidence surrounding the September 11th tragedy, the controversial
essay "The Enemy Within" by the famous American writer Gore Vidal
offers a thorough introduction. Although published in Italy and a
major UK newspaper, The Observer, you will not read Gore Vidal's
controversial essay in the U.S. media. Note: Gore Vidal's latest
book, 'Dreaming War' features this as the opening essay (21).
Finally, 'The War on Freedom" by British political scientist
Nafeez Ahmed asks disconcerting questions about the 9/11 tragedy
(22).
-
-
- FOOTNOTES
-
- (1)London, Heidi Kingstone, 'Middle East:
Trouble in the House of Saud' (January 13, 2003)
- http://www.jrep.com/Mideast/Article-0.html
-
- (2)Recknagel, Charles, 'Iraq: Baghdad Moves to
Euro' (November 1, 2000)
- http://www.rferl.org/nca/features/2000/11/01112000160846.asp
-
- (3)Gutman, Roy & Barry, John, Beyond Baghdad:
Expanding Target List: Washington looks at overhauling the Islamic
and Arab world (August 11, 2002)
- http://www.unansweredquestions.net/timeline/2002/newsweek081102.html
-
- (4)'Economics Drive Iran Euro Oil Plan,
Politics Also Key' (August 2002)
- http://www.iranexpert.com/2002/economicsdriveiraneurooil23august.htm
-
- (5)'Forex Fund Shifting to Euro,' Iran
Financial News, (August 25, 2002)
- http://www.payvand.com/news/02/aug/1080.html
-
- (6)Costello, Tom, 'Japan's Economy at Risk of
Collapse' (December 11, 2002)
- http://www.msnbc.com/news/845708.asp?0cl=cR
-
- (7) Gluck, Caroline, 'North Korea embraces the
euro' (December 1, 2002)
- http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/2531833.stm
-
- (8) 'What the World Thinks in 2002 : How Global
Publics View: Their Lives, Their Countries, The World, America'
(2002)
- http://people-press.org/reports/display.php3?ReportID=165
-
- (9) 'Euro continues to extend its global
influence' (January 7, 2002)
- http://www.europartnership.com/news/02jan07.htm
-
- (10) Henderson, Hazel, 'Beyond Bush's
Unilateralism: Another Bi-Polar World or A New Era of Win-Win?'
(June 2002)
- http://www.hazelhenderson.com/Bush's%20unilateralism.htm
-
- (11) Birms, Larry & Volberding, Alex, 'U.S. is
the Primary Loser in Failed Venezuelan Coup,' Newsday (April 21,
2002)
- http://www.coha.org/COHA%20_in%20_the_news/
-
Articles%202002/newsday_04_21_02_us__venezuela.htm
-
- (12) 'USA intelligence agencies revealed in
plot to oust Venezuela's President,' (Dec 12, 2002)
- http://www.vheadline.com/0212/14248.asp (link
now dead)
-
- (13) Liu, Henry C K, 'US Dollar hegemony has
got to go,' (Asia Times, April 11, 2002)
- http://www.atimes.com/global-econ/DD11Dj01.html
-
- (14) 'The Choice of Currency for the
Denomination of the Oil Bill,' Speech given by Javad Yarjani, Head
of OPEC's Marketing Analysis Department (April, 2002)
- http://www.opec.org/NewsInfo/Speeches/sp2002/spAraqueSpainApr14.htm
-
- (15) Dr. Ali, Nayyer, 'Iraq and Oil,' (December
13, 2002)
- http://www.pakistanlink.com/nayyer/12132002.html
-
- (16) Pfeiffer, Dale, 'Much Ado about Nothing --
Whither the Caspian Riches? ' (December 5, 2002) http://www.fromthewilderness.com/free/ww3/120502_caspian.html
-
- (17) Ruppert, Michael, 'The Unseen Conflict,'
(October 18, 2002)
- http://www.fromthewilderness.com/free/ww3/101802_the_unseen.html
-
- (18) Jean Charles-Briscard & Guillaume Dasquie,
'The Forbidden Truth: U.S.-Taliban Secret Oil Diplomacy, Saudi
Arabia and the Failed Search for bin Laden', Nation Books, 2002.
-
- (19) Ruppert, Michael, 'Colin Campbell on
Oil.'(October 23, 2002)
- http://www.fromthewilderness.com/free/ww3/102302_campbell.html
-
- (20) Golf, Stan, 'The Infinite War and its
Roots,'
- http://www.fromthewilderness.com/free/ww3/082702_infinite_war.html
-
- (21) Vidal, Gore, 'Dreaming War: Blood for Oil
& the Cheney-Bush Junta,' Nation Books, 2002. His essay, 'The
Enemy Within' was first printed in the UK's Observer (Oct 27,
2002)
- http://www.ratical.org/ratville/CAH/EnemyWithin.html
-
- (22) Ahmed, Nafeez, 'The War on Freedom: How
and Why America was Attacked, September 11, 2001', Tree of Life
Publications, 2002.
- Source: http://www.rense.com/general34/realre.htm
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The effects of sanctions on the Muslims
of Iraq
Since 1991 a combination of sanctions, deteriorating health care provisions,
contaminated water amongst others have caused a catastrophe in Iraq. These
general sanctions have been equally as devastating as the continued military
campaign waged against Iraq. Before the bombing in January 1991 started, many
touted sanctions as an alternative to war. However after 12 years we see that
sanctions actually augmented and prolonged the suffering and damage caused by
the bombardment. Sanctions have shown to be an adjunct and not an alternative to
war.
[Read Full
Article]
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How to Stop the War Decisively
Many who support the ‘Stop the War Coalition’ campaign have presented
arguments to try to justify their position. As yet these arguments
have not addressed the daleel (evidence) used nor presented even a shubhat
daleel (semblance of evidence) regarding their position. What we have received,
however, are arguments that are built upon the mind. The main argument used is
‘how can we stop the war except by lobbying the British government?’
[Read
Article] |
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