Saudi Arabia in charge of US Policy: Israel cheerleads, Saudi's finance & Cold War lives
06.02.2012 11:26
By John Stanton
"The Hanbali school, known for
following the most Orthodox form of Islam, is embraced in Saudi Arabia
and by the Taliban.." Council of Foreign Relations--Islam: Governing
Under Sharia, 24 October 2011.
"In August a judge in Tabuk
considered sentencing a man to be surgically paralyzed after convicting
him of paralyzing another man in a fight two years earlier." Human
Rights Watch ,2011.
"In September a Qatif court
sentenced two high school pupils to six months in prison and 120 lashes
for stealing exam questions." Human Rights Watch, 2011.
Watching, listening, and reading the
media coverage, government commentary and think tank analyses on Iran's
nuclear capability and the desire by some to destroy it is like taking
in Abbott and Costello's Who's on First and Math skits.
The logic behind the entire push for
massive military action against Iran makes about as much sense as
Costello's math calculations. Abbott's acceptance of it all ("you are
hired") is an appropriate analogy for the USA's role in the madness as
it is being suckered into another war in mid-east Asia at the
insistence of Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, Israel and similar Abbott
and Costello governed countries.
If the USA has so much power, why are second and third rate countries in charge of its policies in mid-east Asia?
All statements coming out of the mouths
of US government officials signal confusion within the grand brains of
the political, economic and military leadership. The US may or may not
support a Saudi-Israeli operation against Iran said Secretary of Defense
Panetta and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman general Martin Dempsey (USA)
recently. That is utterly unbelievable.
These are flammable times already and
yet government officials, commentators--(and US presidential
candidates--the world over are making foolish and unsupported statements
about Iran and, hence, are ratcheting up the tension. President Obama
says "I can't control Israel" (the USA controls/monitors all air traffic
routes into and out of Iran). Israeli leadership says "only 500
casualties from an air strike" (using the logic of General Buck Turgeson
in the movie Dr. Strangelove). The House of Saud says "cut the head off
the snake (Colin Powell, former US Army general, once said this in
reference to Saddam Hussein). In 1993 Israel said Iran would have
nuclear weapons by 1999. Then they said that Iran would have them by
2001.
The pro-Iranian war movement, and the
Iranian leadership itself, would do well to get a copy of The Fog of
War, 11 lessons from Robert McNamara, former Secretary of Defense, and
watch it repeatedly. One of the points McNamara makes in the film is "I
lived the Cold war every day, 24/7".
The Cold War has not ended as popularly reported. It has just shifted focus.
They are all Schemers: Big Plot and Deadly Subplots
In the overall US strategic scheme the
Iranian matter as a subplot. The central focus of the story is an
attempt by the USA's political, economic and military leadership to
answer two questions: How can strategy, policy, operations and tactics
(SPOT) be developed now to inhibit the development of China and Russia's
instruments of national and international power? What SPOT's are
necessary to maintain America's dollar and military dominance even as
China and Russia--and to a lesser degree India and Brazil--are
developing methods (currency swaps or basket of currencies minus the US
dollar) to bypass the foundation of American global dominance-the dollar
(and T-Bill)?
Another subplot is "it's about the oil."
But the data doesn't quite support the argument.[ΑΥΤΟ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΤΟ ΜΕΓΑΛΟ ΠΡΟΠΑΓΑΝΔΙΣΤΙΚΟ ΠΡΟΠΕΤΑΣΜΑ ΚΑΠΝΟΥ -- ΟΧΙ, ΔΕΝ ΓΙΝΕΤΑΙ ΤΙΠΟΤΕ ΣΤΗΝ Μ.ΑΝΑΤΟΛΗ ΓΙΑ ΤΟ ΠΕΤΡΕΛΑΙΟ!] According to the
Energy Information Agency there are only two mid-east Asian countries in
the top ten that the US imports energy from. Saudi Arabia is in the
number two spot with Mexico close behind. Iraq comes in at number seven.
Rounding out the top ten are Canada (number one), Venezuela, Nigeria,
Ecuador, Angola, Colombia, and Russia (Brazil is number eleven). The USA
imports 49 percent of its energy needs. It is not a stretch to say that
with the right combination of US political and economic policies, and
some sacrifice by the American people, it could wean itself of off
Saudi and Iraqi oil.
So, how and why is it that Saudi Arabia
is able to shape US foreign policy towards the mid-east Asian region as
it does in the face of the Nazi-like rule of its own people? Why do
Americans and Israelis so easily sell their souls to the Saud's? Why
isn't Saudi Arabia featured at Regime Change Central?
John Macarthur writing in Harper's
Magazine (2007) observed that "...I can't shake the idea that the Israel
lobby, no matter how powerful, isn't all it is cracked up to be,
particularly where it concerns the Bush administrations past and
present. Indeed, when I think of pernicious foreign lobbies with
disproportionate sway over American politics, I can't see past Saudi
Arabia and its royal house...Given my dissident politics, I should be up
in arms about the Israel lobby. Not only have I supported the civil
rights of the Palestinians over the years, but two of my principal
intellectual mentors were George W. Ball and Edward Said, both severe
critics of Israel and its extra-special relationship with the United
States.
Foreign Agents for Beheadings
According to the Foreign Agents
Registration a listing of 30 June 2011, the following US organizations
and citizens represented Saudi interests: Hogan Lovela in Washington, DC
(foreign policy interpretation of US Congressional legislative actions,
lobbying); Ketchum in New York (media relations); International
Merchandising Association in Ohio (brand management); Patton Boggs
(monitoring US government statements on Saudi Arabia, legislative
analysis, lobbying); Qurvis LLC (monitoring US media, spreading positive
stories about Saudi Arabia, lobbying, developing Internet-WWW
presence).
The US Department of State, Human Rights
Bureau, reported that in 2010 Saudi Arabia was an awful place to live
unless you are a guy "...no right to change the government peacefully;
torture and physical abuse; poor prison and detention center conditions;
arbitrary arrest and incommunicado detention; denial of fair and public
trials and lack of due process in the judicial system; political
prisoners; restrictions on civil liberties such as freedoms of speech
(including the Internet), assembly, association, movement, and severe
restrictions on religious freedom; and corruption and lack of government
transparency. Violence against women and a lack of equal rights for
women, violations of the rights of children, trafficking in persons, and
discrimination on the basis of gender, religion, sect, and ethnicity
were common. The lack of workers' rights, including the employment
sponsorship system, remained a severe problem."
Then there is the country analysis done
on Saudi Arabia by Human Rights Watch (2011). "Human rights conditions
remain poor in Saudi Arabia. King Abdullah has not fulfilled several
specific reform promises; reforms to date have involved largely symbolic
steps to improve the visibility of women and marginally expand freedom
of expression. Authorities continue to systematically suppress or fail
to protect the rights of nine million Saudi women and girls, eight
million foreign workers, and some two million Shia citizens. Each year
thousands of people receive unfair trials or are subject to arbitrary
detention. Curbs on freedom of association, expression, and movement, as
well as a pervasive lack of official accountability, remain serious
concerns.
Iraqi Government Fears Saudi Arabia
Simon Tisdall writing for the Guardian,
UK (2010) reported that the Iraqi government viewed Saudi Arabia as a
threat to its internal security. " Iraqi government officials see Saudi
Arabia, not Iran, as the biggest threat to the integrity and cohesion of
their fledgling democratic state, leaked US state department cables
reveal. The Iraqi concerns, analyzed in a dispatch sent from the US
embassy in Baghdad by then ambassador Christopher Hill in September
2009, represent a fundamental divergence from the American and British
view of Iran as arch-predator in Iraq. 'Iraq views relations with Saudi
Arabia as among its most challenging given Riyadh's money, deeply
ingrained anti-Shia attitudes and [Saudi] suspicions that a Shia-led
Iraq will inevitably further Iranian regional influence,' Hill writes.
'Iraqi contacts assess that the Saudi goal (and that of most other Sunni
Arab states, to varying degrees) is to enhance Sunni influence, dilute
Shia dominance and promote the formation of a weak and fractured Iraqi
government.' Hill's unexpected assessment flies in the face of the
conventional wisdom that Iranian activities, overt and covert, are the
biggest obstacle to Iraq's development."
Saudi Arabia, Syria: History of Dislike
A Muslim News report (2011) reminds that
Saudi Arabia and Syria have been at odds with each other for most of
their history. As such, the current turmoil in Syria, in which Saudi
Arabia and the US are involved on the ground--should be viewed through a
historical microscope. Americans are largely deficient on the study of
history other than their own. "Syria prides itself as a secular republic
and a bastion of Arab nationalism with close ties to Russia. On the
other hand, Saudi Arabia is a reactionary monarchy and embodies itself
as a caretaker of Islam, while having an extensive bond with the US and
Western Europe. True, the rhetoric of the two countries may not
correspond with their practice, but the ideological narratives they
superficially embrace are in conflict, and much of their foreign policy
aims have been at odds."
The US government approach to Syria, as
it is with Iran, was largely crafted by Saudi Arabia. This is a country
who speaks of the humanitarian crisis in Syria as though it is the USA.
It is more intolerant of dissent than the USSR ever was. Of all
ironies, the fact that the USA negotiated with the USSR for decades and
will not with Iran has to be in the top ten ironies of human history.
What it says is that on crucial matters of mid-east Asian matters
involving war and oppression, the US political process is influenced
and designed by repressive governments represented by American citizens.
Young people die and will continue to die as a result of this.
Human Rights Watch notes that "US
pressure for human rights improvements was imperceptible. In September
the Pentagon proposed for Congressional approval a US$60 billion arms
sale to Saudi Arabia, the biggest-ever US arms sale. It is unknown
whether the UK made efforts through the Two Kingdoms Dialogue to promote
human rights, but if so they had no tangible effect...
Before he died in the World Trade Center
on 9/11, the former FBI counterterrorism chief John O'Neill complained
to French investigator Jean-Charles Brisard that Saudi pressure on the
State Department had prevented him from fully investigating possible
al-Qaida involvement in the Khobar Towers bombing in 1996, which killed
19 U.S. servicemen, and of the destroyer Cole in 2000. As with
Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf, there's always talk of the Saudis
playing a double game with al-Qaida publicly denouncing it and
privately paying it off but you don't have to be a conspiracy theorist
to understand that the Saudis don't have America's best interests at
heart."
John Stanton is a Virginia based writer specializing in national security. Reach him at cioran123@yahoo.com
--------------------------------------------------
No comments:
Post a Comment