PARIS –
After a sea of lies and a tsunami of propaganda, the ugly truth
behind the Iraq and Afghanistan wars finally emerged into full
view this week.
Four major
western oil companies, Exxon, Mobil, Shell, BP and Total, are
about to sign US-brokered no-bid contracts with the US-installed
Baghdad regime to begin exploiting Iraq’s oil fields. Saddam
Hussein had kicked these firms out three decades ago when he
nationalized Iraq’s foreign-owned oil industry for the benefit
of Iraq’s national development. The Baghdad regime is turning
back the clock.
This agreement
comes as talks are continuing between the Washington and its
Baghdad client regime over future US basing rights in Iraq.
After some face-saving Iraqi objections, it is expected that
Baghdad will sign a compact with Washington giving US forces
control of Iraq and its air space in a manner very similar to
Great Britain’s colonial arrangement with Iraq.
Interestingly,
the same oil companies that used to exploit Iraq when it was
a British colony are now returning. As former US Federal Reserve
Chairman Alan Greenspan recently admitted, the Iraq war was
all about oil. VP Dick Cheney stated in 2003 that the invasion
of Iraq was about oil, and for the sake of Israel.
Meanwhile,
according to Pakistani and Indian sources, Afghanistan just
signed a major deal to launch a long-planned, 1680 km long pipeline
project expected to cost $ 8 billion. If completed, the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India
pipeline (TAPI) will export gas and, later, oil from the Caspian
Basin to Pakistan’s coast where tankers will transport it to
the west.
The Caspian
Basin located under the Central Asian states of Turkmenistan,
Uzbekistan and Kazakkstan, holds an estimated 300 trillion cubic
feet of gas and 100–200 billion barrels of oil. Securing the
world’s last remaining known energy Eldorado is strategic priority
for the western powers. China can only look on with envy.
But there
are only two practical ways to get gas and oil out of landlocked
Central Asia to the sea: through Iran, or through Afghanistan
to Pakistan. For Washington, Iran is tabu. That leaves Pakistan,
but to get there, the planned pipeline must cross western Afghanistan,
including the cities of Herat and Kandahar.
In 1998,
the Afghan anti-Communist movement Taliban and a western oil
consortium led by the US firm UNOCAL signed a major pipeline
deal. UNOCAL lavished money and attention on Taliban, flew a
senior delegation to Texas, and also hired an minor Afghan official,
one Hamid Karzai.
Enter Osama
bin Laden. He advised the unworldly Taliban leaders to reject
the US deal and got them to accept a better offer from an Argentine
consortium, Bridas. Washington was furious and, according to
some accounts, threatened Taliban with war.
In early
2001, six or seven months before 9/11, Washington made the decision
to invade Afghanistan, overthrow Taliban, and install a client
regime that would build the energy pipelines. But Washington
still kept up sending money to Taliban until four months before
9/11 in an effort to keep it "on side" for possible
use in a war or strikes against Iran.
The 9/11
attacks, about which Taliban knew nothing, supplied the pretext
to invade Afghanistan. The initial US operation had the legitimate
objective of wiping out Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaida. But after
its 300 members fled to Pakistan, the US stayed on, built bases
– which just happened to be adjacent to the planned pipeline
route – and installed former UNOCAL"consultant" Hamid
Karzai as leader.
Washington
disguised its energy geopolitics by claiming the Afghan occupation
was to fight "Islamic terrorism," liberate women,
build schools, and promote democracy. Ironically, the Soviets
made exactly the same claims when they occupied Afghanistan
from 1979-1989. The cover story for Iraq was weapons of mass
destruction, Saddam’s supposed links to 9/11, and promoting
democracy.
Work
will begin on the TAPI once Taliban forces are cleared from
the pipeline route by US, Canadian and NATO forces. As American
analyst Kevin Phillips writes, the US military and its allies
have become an "energy protection force."
From Washington’s
viewpoint, the TAPI deal has the added benefit of scuttling
another proposed pipeline project that would have delivered
Iranian gas and oil to Pakistan and India.
India’s
energy needs are expected to triple over the next decade to
8 billion barrels of oil and 80 million cubic meters of gas
daily. Delhi, which has its own designs on Afghanistan and has
been stirring the pot there, is cock-a-hoop over the new pipeline
plan. Russia, by contrast, is grumpy, having hoped to monopolize
Central Asian energy exports.
Energy
is more important than blood in our modern world. The US is
a great power with massive energy needs. Domination of oil is
a pillar of America’s world power. Afghanistan and Iraq are
all about control of oil.