They're
Staying
by
Kevin B. Zeese
by Kevin B. Zeese

The message
is clear. Indeed, it's gigantic for all Iraqi's, for the entire
world to see. A 100-acre compound – ten times the size of the typical
U.S. embassy, the size of 80 football fields, six times larger than
the UN, the size of Vatican City. The US Embassy Compound, in the
middle of Baghdad – the center for US domination of the Middle East
and its resources.
The compound
towers above the Tigris River like a modern fortress. It will have
its own sources of power and water and sit in the heart of Baghdad.
If there is any thought that the US is planning on leaving Iraq,
the new embassy should make it clear "We're staying!"
The growing
skyline of the US embassy in Baghdad is only the most recent indication
that the US has no intention of leaving. President Bush has already
told us we're there until the end of his tenure. More important
than words, building "permanent" military bases in Iraq
re-enforces the message of the huge embassy.
The DoD does
not like to use the word "permanent" even for our bases
in Germany and Korea. Euphemisms like "enduring bases"
or "contingency operating bases" are used. They're less
likely than "permanent" to cause further anti-American
unrest in Iraq.
Brig. Gen.
Mark Kimmitt, deputy chief of operations for the coalition in Iraq,
told the Chicago Tribune in March 2004: "This is
a blueprint for how we could operate in the Middle East." Zoltan
Grossman, a geographer at Evergreen State College in Olympia, Wash.,
told the Christian
Science Monitor that since the fall of the Berlin Wall
in 1989 the US has established a string of 35 new bases between
Poland and Pakistan, not including the Iraqi bases. He maintains
the US is establishing a "sphere of influence" in that
region. The Monitor also reports that Joseph Gerson, author of The
Sun Never Sets: Confronting the Network of Foreign US Military Bases,
says the war and bases aim at maintaining US control over the Middle
East with its massive oil resources.
The plan entails
construction of long-lasting facilities in Iraq. The bases will
include barracks and offices built of concrete blocks, rather than
metal trailers and tents. The buildings are designed to withstand
direct mortar strikes. Initial funding was provided in the $82 billion
supplemental appropriations bill approved by Congress in May 2005.
Permanent
Military Bases Planned for Iraq

The Christian
Science Monitor reported in April 2006, "the Pentagon
would prefer to keep its bases in Iraq. It has already spent $1
billion or more on them, outfitting some with underground bunkers
and other characteristics of long-term bases. Some US bases in Iraq
are huge, e.g., Camp Anaconda, north of Baghdad, occupies 15 square
miles, boasts two swimming pools, a gym, a miniature-golf course,
and a first-run movie theater. The $67.6 billion emergency bill
to cover Iraq and Afghanistan military costs includes $348 million
for further base construction."
According to
Global Security Watch, on March 23, 2004 "it was reported that
US engineers are focusing on constructing 14 enduring bases, long-term
encampments for the thousands of American troops expected to serve
in Iraq for at least two years. The US plans to operate from former
Iraqi bases in Baghdad, Mosul, Taji, Balad, Kirkuk and in areas
near Nasiriyah, near Tikrit, near Fallujah and between Irbil and
Kirkuk... enhance airfields in Baghdad and Mosul..."
Long-lasting
military bases in Iraq will be an expensive budget item even if
the US decides to reduce its forces to 50,000, less than half the
current troop level. The cost would run between $5 billion to $7
billion a year, estimates
Gordon Adams, director of Security Policy Studies at George
Washington University in Washington, D.C. Recently, the House voted,
by a voice vote, to oppose a permanent military presence in Iraq.
Future on-the-record votes for appropriations will show whether
this was a symbolic election-year vote, or something the House is
serious about.
President George
W Bush claims US only intends to stay "as long as necessary
and not one day more." And, Secretary of State Donald Rumsfeld
has testified on February 17, 2005 in Congress: "I can assure
you that we have no intention at the present time of putting permanent
bases in Iraq." These claims are hard to believe when Congress
voted for the first funds for long-term bases that May, and construction
is now underway.
As Joost
Hiltermann, of the International Crisis Group, said: "One
of the reasons they invaded, as far as I can tell, is because they
needed to shift their military operation from Saudi Arabia and Iraq
was probably the easiest one in terms of a big country to support
their presence in the Gulf." Also, the idea that the US wanted
to swap Iraq for Saudi Arabia was acknowledged by then-deputy secretary
of defense Paul
Wolfowitz in an interview with Vanity Fair in 2003 saying:
". . . we can now remove almost all of our forces from Saudi
Arabia. Their presence there over the last 12 years has been a source
of enormous difficulty for a friendly government. It's been a huge
recruiting device for al Qaeda."
On April 20,
2003 the New York Times reported "the US is planning
a long-term military relationship with the emerging government of
Iraq, one that would grant the Pentagon access to military bases
and project American influence into the heart of the unsettled region."
On May 2005
the Washington Post reported that plans called for consolidating
American troops in Iraq into four large air bases: Tallil in the
south, Al Asad in the west, Balad in the center and either Irbil
or Qayyarah in the north. Each base would support a brigade combat
team, along with aviation and other support personnel.
In January
2005 it was reported that the Pentagon was building a permanent
military communications system in Iraq. The new Central Iraq Microwave
System is to consist of up to 12 communications towers throughout
Iraq, along with fiber-optic cables connecting Camp Victory to other
coalition bases in the country. The US also has plans to renovate
and enhance airfields in Baghdad and Mosul, and rebuild 70 miles
of road on the main route for US troops headed north.
The infrastructure
is being put in place for a long-term military presence in Iraq.
Unless Americans get tired of footing the growing and expensive
bill for occupying Iraq – now at nearly $10
billion per month – or the Iraqis are able to force the United
States to leave it looks like Baghdad will be the center of operations
for the US presence in the Middle East. The US will be sitting on
top of the Earth's vast, but shrinking, oil resources.
MAPS of US
bases can be seen at:
Description
of the 14 Long-Term Bases in Iraq
Source:
GlobalSecurity.org
As of mid-2005,
the US military had 106 forward operating bases in Iraq, including
what the Pentagon calls 14 "enduring" bases – all of which
are to be consolidated into four mega-bases.
1) Green
Zone (Baghdad)
The Green Zone
in central Baghdad includes the main palaces of former President
Saddam Hussein. The area at one time housed the Coalition Provisional
Authority; it still houses the offices of major US consulting companies
and the temporary US embassy facilities.
2) Camp
Anaconda (Balad Airbase)
Camp Anaconda
is a large US logistical base near Balad. The camp is spread
over 15 square miles and is being constructed to accommodate 20,000
soldiers.
3) Camp
Taji (Taji)
Camp Taji,
former Iraqi Republican Guard "military city," is now
a huge US base equipped with a Subway, Burger King and Pizza
Hut on the premises.
4) Camp
Falcon-Al-Sarq (Baghdad)
In late September
2003, the 439th Engineering Battalion delivered over 100,000 tons
of gravel and is assisting with building roads, walls, guard towers,
and buildings for Camp Falcon. Camp Falcon is planned to house
5,000 soldiers.
5) Post
Freedom (Mosul)
Saddam Hussein's
former palace in Mosul is currently home to the 101st Airborne Division.
6) Camp
Victory-Al Nasr (Baghdad Airfield)
Camp Victory
is a US Army base situated on airport grounds about 5 kilometers
from Baghdad International Airport. The base can house up
to 14,000 troops. Al Faw Palace on Camp Victory is surrounded
by a man-made lake and serves as an unofficial conference center
for the Army.
7) Camp
Marez (Mosul Airfield)
Located at
an airfield southwest of Mosul, Camp Marez has a tent dining capacity
for 500. In December 2004, a suicide bomber killed himself and 13
US soldiers at the base’s dining tent.
8) Camp
Renegade (Kirkuk)
Strategically
located near the Kirkuk oil fields and the Kirkuk refinery and petrochemical
plant, Camp Renegade has a dormitory that houses up to 1,664 airmen
in 13 buildings with six to eight people to a room.
9) Camp
Speicher (Tikrit)
Named after
F/A-18 pilot Michael "Scott" Speicher who was shot down during the
first Gulf War in 1991, Camp Speicher is located near Tikrit in
northern Iraq, approximately 170 kilometers north of Baghdad.
10) Camp
Fallujah (Rail Station?)
The exact whereabouts
and name of this base is unknown. Analysts believe that the
US is building an "enduring base" in Fallujah, a large
town forty miles west of Baghdad. Fallujah has proved to be
the most violence prone area in Iraq. Between early April
2004, when Marines halted their first offensive against the city,
and November 2004, when the city was "re-taken" from insurgents,
Fallujah was a no-go area with numerous murders and bombings.
11) Unknown
name (Nasiriyah)
The exact whereabouts
and name of this base is unknown. Analysts believe that the
US is building an "enduring base" near Nasiriyah, a provincial
capital of South-East Iraq on the Euphrates River.
12) Unknown
name (between Irbil and Kirkuk)
13) Unknown
14) Unknown
April
22, 2006
Kevin
Zeese [send him mail]
is director of Democracy
Rising.
Copyright
2006 Kevin Zeese
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Zeese Archives
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