Suicide Poker or… Arabian Roulette?
by
Tom Chartier
by Tom Chartier
DIGG THIS
International
wheelings and dealings are like a complex game of poker where the
nations playing don’t know how many cards are in the deck. Everybody
hides aces up their sleeves. Everybody bluffs. Double-dealing is
rife. Some sit quietly with their poker faces and wait for the best
time to call. Others posture and strut. Some players excel and some
can’t tell their ace from a hole in the ground.
The U.S. adventure
in the Middle East has been a mind-boggling display of inept gamesmanship.
Indeed, to our Great Decider it has seemed to be little more than
a game all along. With the March 2003 invasion of Iraq, President
Bush laid his cards on the table expecting to rake in all the chips
of oil and laurels of victory to transform the frat-boy into the
Great Liberator thus securing a glorious chapter in the history
books. As we have seen, frat-boy’s hand contained garbage.
So Bush the
Elder stepped in to save Bush the Lesser with some better players,
James Baker, Lee Hamilton and Robert Gates. The Iraq Study Group
thinks they know how to play the game and they have handed the dealer
a new, stacked deck of cards with which Bush the Lesser can, theoretically,
play to win.
Arrogance,
greed, and ignorance have described Bush’s method of play in the
Middle East. He and his neocon string-pullers have been playing
as if they had magic X-ray glasses to see through everyone’s cards.
The game has
not been friendly. It has gone on too long at too high a cost. Now
there is a possible royal flush on the table… a Saudi Arabian Royal
Flush. The House of Saud has run out of patience. King Abdullah
of Saudi Arabia has made it clear that were Iraq to be vacated by
the doomed U.S. Army, Saudi Arabia and Jordan would come to the
aid of the Iraqi Sunnis. It has been hinted that private
Saudi money has been supporting the Sunni insurgents.
Former Saudi
Ambassador to the U.S., and member of the Saudi Royal family, Prince
Turki al-Faisal stated: "Since America came to Iraq uninvited,
it should not leave Iraq uninvited."
A player in
this game can’t walk away from the table whenever he pleases.
However, Prince Turki has suddenly
packed up and walked out of Washington. What conclusions can be
drawn from that recent 'diplomatic mystery'? Did Prince
Turki’s family obligations require his immediate presence in Saudi
Arabia or was his abrupt
departure a warning to the US?
Prince Turki’s
departure could signal a serious split between the Saudi Royal family.
Could the Saudi Royal family be another
fatality of Bush’s failed Middle East policy?
That would be certain disaster for U.S. as well.
The Saudis
may be united and they may not be bluffing. Stability in the Middle
East is crucial to all of the Gulf States. Thanks to the idiocy
of the United States, that fragile stability balances on the edge
of a knife. Bush has unleashed a war that he is unable to contain
let alone win. Even if Bush were to accept the ISG Report’s 79 recommendations,
his legacy would be endless war in the Middle East. The U.S. think
tanks, corporations and above all the Bush Administration have no
concept of Arab culture. They have played the game as if everyone
in the world "thinks" just like them.
Today there
are just six
people fluent in Arabic stationed in the U.S. Embassy in Iraq.
This is preposterous arrogance. U.S. government policy in the Middle
East has ignored the tribal, family-like loyalties of Arab society.
No decision Bush might make will work until this basic fact is understood.
Does Saudi
Arabia hold the final ace? I wouldn’t want to bet against it. What
do you think? Whether they do or not, they are no longer willing
to sit by while the chaos spreads. Saudi Arabia and Jordan have
stepped in to take control of the game. Bush’s cowboy policy of
corporation-run Middle East is no longer being tolerated.
In fact, it
seems Bush has reached a point where he does
not know what to do or which cards to play.
Is Sunni Saudi
Arabia tired of Shiite Iran’s provocations? Playing a game of irritating
bluff, Iran has been needling the White House. Iranian President
Ahmadinejad’s unyielding nuclear stance is calling America and Israel’s
bluff. Are the US and Israel stupid enough to invade Iran? Was Iran’s
recent Holocaust Conference a none-too-subtle test designed to force
Bush and Israel’s Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to show their hands?
Has Iran been playing a fool’s game as well?
Israel has
reacted with a veiled
threat to use the very nuclear weapons that they have claimed
not to have.
Last summer,
Olmert launched an insane attack on the Lebanon only to suffer Israel’s
second military defeat by Hezbollah. Olmert is unable to stop Palestinian
reprisals for greedy and brutal Israeli
policy. Consequently, hard line, right wing Israeli leaders
are more paranoid and defensive than ever. This does nothing but
put the lives of millions of innocent Israelis in greater peril.
Have Saudi
Arabia and Jordan decided that enough is enough? Are they fed up
with an ignorant and inept White House that attempts to bully the
Middle East into an impossible scenario? Have they decided to tell
the U.S. what to do?
Certainly the
Saudi announcement of support for Iraqi Sunnis states a simple fact
of war. Wars cannot be won without loyalty. To win you must
pick a side. Have the most powerful Sunni families decided to take
care of their brother Sunnis while forcing the hand of the U.S?
It would seem so.
It is unwise
to ignore
the culture of the Arabs dominated by tribal loyalties. The
British government has just learned this hard lesson the hard way.
When the British Serious Fraud Office uncovered a BAE Systems slush
fund "which it allegedly used to bribe senior Saudi officials
to secure contracts," the Saudis reacted with anger. A prominent
Saudi businessman told the Times: "Saudi Arabia does not make
commercial or defense decisions based on what shareholders or voters
think. It is run like a family business. If you upset members of
the family, they will simply choose another supplier." The
Serious Fraud Office investigation has done nothing but enrage the
Saudi Royal family. Insulted, they threatened to take their
business elsewhere which would lose British industry many thousands
of jobs and millions of pounds. According to the Times, BAE
Systems is "the UK’s prime defense contractor and Britain’s
biggest manufacturer." Needless to say the
Times now reports: "Downing Street yesterday bowed to pressure
from Saudi Arabia and forced the Serious Fraud Office to abandon
its investigation." Why? The Times quotes Lord Goldsmith,
the Attorney General speaking to the House of Lords: "They
[the PM and others] have expressed the clear view that continuation
of the investigation would cause serious damage to UK/Saudi security,
intelligence and diplomatic co-operation, which is likely to have
seriously negative consequences for the UK public interest in terms
of both national security and our highest priority foreign policy
objectives in the Middle East." Sweet are the uses of
the War on Terror.
Loyalty is
an important factor in Arab culture. Woe to those who betray it.
And the Arabs do not take betrayals lightly. That little
detail has been overlooked by the West since the 1916 Sykes-Picot
Agreement.
What the Saudi
declaration of support for the Iraqi Sunnis tells the world is that
Saudi Arabia will no longer tolerate U.S. pussy-footing
around. Bush must choose sides. Does he support the Sunnis
or the Shiites? Does he support Israel or the rest of the Middle
East? If the U.S. continues to allow Israel to dictate its policy,
the Saudi - U.S. special relationship, and the oil that flows from
it, will dry up.
So there it
is: the U.S. has been given a choice. Will it remain friends with
the Sunni-governed, oil-producing, Gulf States? Or will Bush forsake
the Sunnis, the Saudis and the GOP’s SUV-driving constituency and
bow to the Shia majority in Iraq? Either choice will further destabilize
the Middle East.
If Bush decides
to support the Iraqi Sunnis that could justify his desire to attack
Shia Iran. The neoconservative game of endless war may continue
with a Saudi-sanctioned strike against Tehran. White House spokesman
Tony Snow recently
stated that the Saudis are "rightly concerned about the adventurism
of Iranians in Iraq, and we share that concern."
America’s days
as a two-timer are over.
During the
high-stakes tensions at the poker table, one quiet player with a
very
strong hand goes unnoticed. Russia.
China
owns the bank.
The U.S. sits
at poker table with an empty hand and bad
credit. Right now, it seems that
Saudi Arabia holds the real cards. So, does the U.S. take the hint
and play along? Can it continue its game of suicide poker? Or is
it really more a game of Arabian Roulette?
Elizabeth
Gyllensvard edited and contributed to this story.
December
16, 2006
Tom
Chartier [send him mail]
played lead guitar in legendary Los Angeles punk band The Rotters
for 26 years until their final appearance in January of 2004. He
has lived in Tokyo and Los Angeles. Currently he resides somewhere
in the Caribbean.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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