The Strategy of Chaos and Ethnic Cleansing
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
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1. The
Possessed and Their Plans
In Dostoevsky's
1872 novel, The
Possessed, a prescient dissection of the roots of political
terrorism, a bit player named Shigalov provides a revealing glimpse
of how the noble idea of "humanitarian intervention" to bring freedom
and democracy to the benighted places of the earth invariably becomes
a brutal despotism, geared toward imposing a single vision of world
order.
"Having started
from the idea of unlimited freedom," says the gloomy dullard, "I've
ended up with unlimited despotism," in which a small elite will
order the affairs of the human "herd." It might sound grim, he adds,
"but there can be no other solution of the problem but mine."
A positively
Shigalovian plan for global re-ordering a brutal vision of
national dismemberment, forced migration, and ethnic cleansing on
a gargantuan scale was recently published in Armed Forces
Journal, throwing a stark light on the mindset of the "full spectrum
dominance" gang now in power in Washington. The article could perhaps
be dismissed as a typical neo-con fantasy but it has already
provoked a diplomatic firestorm from the plan's intended targets,
requiring a State Department intervention to dampen the flames.
Ralph Peters,
"Terror
War" analyst and ex-military intelligence officer, is the author
of the Journal piece. He has recently joined with the bold visionaries
of the Project for a New American Century crowd. That's the group
made up of Bush Faction heavy hitters Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz,
Scooter Libby, Elliot Abrams, Brother Jeb and others who
in September 2000 laid out the blueprint that George W. followed
faithfully once he acquired the presidency.
This plan,
long pre-dating 9/11, included astronomical hikes in the military
budget; invading Iraq and establishing a "permanent role" for a
"substantial American force presence in the Gulf"; planting a "worldwide
network of forward operating bases"; gutting arms control treaties;
and making "regime change" a primary focus of American policy. The
PNAC plan did note that it could take decades to get the American
people to accept these "revolutionary" changes; unless, of course,
the United States was struck by "some catastrophic and catalyzing
event like a new Pearl Harbor."
Peters was
not involved with this remarkably prophetic document, but he recently
hitched up with PNAC and its demands for adding at least 25,000
new soldiers to US forces each year. However, in his AFJ article
aptly named "Blood
Borders" he surpasses his new compatriots. Where they
were content merely to usurp existing regimes, Peters has produced
a detailed plan for re-ordering whole regions ruthlessly
chopping up Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan, and
creating new countries such as Greater Kurdistan, a Vatican-like
"Islamic Sacred State" out of Mecca and Medina, and a "Free Baluchistan,"
tearing the oil-rich province away from Pakistan. He'd also lighten
Islamabad of its troublesome Waziristan provinces and give them
to Afghanistan.
To be sure,
Peters acknowledges that "correcting" these borders "may be impossible.
For now." Nevertheless, he assures us that his admittedly draconian
adjustments are the only way we will ever see "a more peaceful Middle
East." And in any case, he says, "given time and the inevitable
attendant bloodshed new and natural borders will emerge."
Why? Because of a "dirty little secret from 5,000 years of history:
Ethnic cleansing works."
Thus, from
the warmongers' stated goal of freedom for all nations, we've now
arrived at a savage hacking at their sovereignty, with enforced
"corrections" and ethnic cleansing "from the Bosporus to the Indus."
Long-eared Shigalov would surely approve.
2. Dreams
Become Reality
But although
the Peters plan like the 2000 PNAC blueprint was ignored
in the Homeland, those on the receiving end of its enforced beneficence
took notice. Especially in Pakistan, where the shaky throne of military
dictator and Bush favorite Pervez Musharraf is being rattled by
separatist uprisings in several provinces. These include oil-rich
Baluchistan, which makes up 42 percent of the nation's territory
not exactly a chunk they'd like to give up for Peters's reshuffle.
Angry editorials in Pakistani papers denounced his piece, with one
asking why Great Britain was not a target for dissolution: shouldn't
Scotland and Wales be free too? Another suggested returning California
and Texas to Mexico while Peters was out there redressing "unnatural"
borders. The plan sparked a heated response in Turkey as well, and
gave fuel to hardliners throughout the Middle East, who seized on
it as confirmation of an all-out Western "war on Islam."
Late last
month, the US State Department was forced to issue a disavowal of
the article, as Pakistan's Dawn newspaper reports. The article was
the work of a private citizen and didn't reflect official government
policy, said State mouthpiece Sean McCormack, who couldn't resist
adding that, yes, the US was committed to sweeping change in the
arc of crisis but only because "this call [for change] comes
from the Middle East itself." In other words, they're asking for
it.
And they are
certainly getting it in the neck. If the events of the past
two weeks are not the work of a deliberate plan to foment mass upheaval
and engineer large doses of Peter's lauded political cure-all, ethnic
cleansing, the effect on the ground is the same.
Pakistan is
now being roiled by the killing late last month of Akbar Bugti,
a prominent Baluchi leader and former government minister. His death
during a raid by Pakistani military forces has set off mass protests
throughout Baluchistan, where the locals have long been squeezed
out of the province's oil and gas riches. A violent separatist movement
has emerged in recent years, endangering plans for a major pipeline
system from Turkmenistan through Afghanistan to Baluchistan. This
unrest has also made it difficult for the US to use the province
as a staging area for threatening or attacking Iran,
which lies across Baluchistan's border.
Bugti, a leading
player on the national stage for more than 30 years, demanded more
autonomy for the province, but denied backing outright separatism.
Even so, he became a symbol of Baluchi resistance; surely his removal
would quell the uprising and let Musharraf's cronies and his American
backers get on with their business in Baluchistan. Or so the thinking
went in the dictator's inner circle. But Bugti's death has turned
out to be a major blunder, denounced by many in Pakistan's top political
and most ominously for Musharraf military circles.
At the same
time, Musharraf is trying to shore up his faltering support by signing
truces with the Islamic extremists now sheltering al-Qaeda and Taliban
forces in North and South Waziristan. Remarkably, Musharraf has
agreed to ease military pressure on the renegade provinces and pour
in economic aid (much of it from the US), the San Jose Mercury News
reported last week. These truces fully backed by the Bush
administration are designed to cool off fundamentalist resistance
to the Musharraf regime, and allow him to shift more forces to Baluchistan.
But the agreements have also allowed the extremist forces in the
provinces, including al-Qaeda, to expand their operations in neighboring
Afghanistan.
The bloody
results of this policy are evident in the fast-crumbling Afghan
state, where the resurgent Taliban has essentially recaptured whole
provinces and warlords reap the profits of record-breaking opium
crops. The fighters freed up by Musharraf's truces in Waziristan
are now killing Americans, Canadian, Brits and scores of Afghans.
Afghanistan's President Karzai is incensed at the agreements, while
the new head of the British army, Sir Richard Dannat, says UK forces
are "barely" coping with the unexpected level of combat. But they
can do nothing, because the Bush administration has decided it is
in its interests to back Musharraf's domestic political moves
even if this costs American and allied lives. And so the chaos in
Afghanistan keeps growing. And of course, Osama bin Laden can breathe
a little easier; indeed, Pakistani officials now say that even if
he is found in Waziristan, he will not be arrested, as long as "he
is being like a peaceful citizen," Major General Shaukat Sultan
Khan told ABC New on Tuesday.
Meanwhile,
in Iraq, this week's assassination of Sheikh Hassan Mohammed Mahdi
al-Jawad, a top aide to Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, provided stark
underscoring for Sistani's alarming admission: "I no longer have
the power to save Iraq from civil war." Sistani, a relative moderate
long credited with keeping the Shiite majority from rising against
the Americans or turning violent against the Sunnis, said he was
bitterly disappointed in the Bush-backed central government for
its weakness and corruption, the Daily Telegraph reports. He acknowledged
that he has lost influence with younger Shiites, who now look to
firebrand cleric Motqada al-Sadr for guidance and weapons.
Sadr's forces
have been fighting pitched battles with Sunni sectarians and Iraqi
government troops largely militia members of SCIRI, another
Shiite faction. Iraq is being chewed to pieces by a three-way civil
war Sunni against Shiite, insurgents against the government,
Shiite against Shiite with the Americans taking sides as
it suits them. The resulting chaos makes it less and less likely
that US troops now seen as a "stabilizing force" amongst
these warring barbarian hordes will withdraw anytime soon,
if ever. Since the original Iraq post-war plan of a cakewalk and
flowers in an obedient satrapy never panned out, perhaps sectarian
turmoil might be the best way to achieve that PNAC prescription
for a permanent American military presence.
But do things
really work that way? Would planners incorporate chaos and bloody
turmoil as part of a larger strategy of re-ordering regions and
changing regimes?
The Sunday
Times reported this week that Israel is embarking on a major strategic
shift after being stymied by Hezbollah in Lebanon. The new focus
will turn away from Lebanon and Palestine to concentrate on big
game: taking out Syria and Iran. Elite brigades are being reconfigured
for "deep cross-border operations" in the two countries, while veteran
PNACker Richard Perle a leading strategist for the Israeli
hard-Right is calling for bomb strikes on Syria.
Naturally,
American officials are in the loop on the Israeli plans. The State
Department reportedly wants to engage Damascus diplomatically and
wean it away from its alliance with Iran, the paper reports, because
an attack on Syria "could unleash Islamic fundamentalist terror
in what has hitherto been a stable dictatorship." But this seems
to be just what the Pentagon led by PNACker Rumsfeld
would like to see: sectarian strife tearing Syria apart.
"If Syria
spirals into chaos, at least they'll be taking on each other rather
than heading for Jerusalem," a Pentagon insider told the paper.
So there it
is: the strategy of chaos, the efficacy of ethnic cleansing. This
brief tour of the arc of crisis, taken from only a few days of news
stories, sounds remarkably like the world Peters prophesied almost
10 years ago, in Parameters, the journal of the US Army War College.
UK author Nafeez Ahmed dug up the Peters quote for his Op-Ed News
article on the "Blood Borders" controversy, and it is most apt:
"There will
be no peace," Peters wrote in the summer of 1997. "At any given
moment for the rest of our lifetimes, there will be multiple conflicts
in mutating forms around the globe. Violent conflict will dominate
the headlines, but cultural and economic struggles will be steadier
and ultimately more decisive. The de facto role of the US armed
forces will be to keep the world safe for our economy and open to
our cultural assault. To those ends, we will do a fair amount of
killing."
The brain-sick
dreamers of The Possessed had to wait almost 50 years to
see their nihilistic visions come to pass in the Revolution and
the Red Terror; but it seems our modern Shigalovs can watch their
dreams come true in each day's headlines.
September
13, 2006
Chris
Floyd [send him mail]
is the author of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2006 Chris Floyd
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