Obviously Oil
By Rep. Dennis Kucinich,
AlterNet
March 11, 2003

Editor's Note: Although Dennis Kucinich was
aggressively attacked by
Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen for suggesting
that the preemptive
strike on Iraq was based on oil, the Post refused to
print the presidential
candidate and Ohio Democrat's response. This was
especially frustrating, since
the Post editorial stance and balance of editorial
page columns have been
decidedly pro-war. You can tell the Post how you feel
about this ommission at
[email protected].

Is President Bush's war in Iraq about oil? Of course
it is. Sometimes, the obvious
answer is the right one: Oil is a major factor in the
President's march to war, just
as oil is a major factor in every aspect of U.S.
policy in the Persian Gulf.

Ask yourself:

What commodity accounts for 83 percent of total
exports from the Persian Gulf?
What is the U.S. protecting with our permanent
deployment of about 25,000
military personnel, 6 fighter squadrons, 6 bomber
squadrons, 13 air control and
reconnaissance squadrons, one aircraft carrier battle
group, and one amphibious
ready group based at 11 military installations in the
countries of the Persian Gulf?
(Note, the disproportionate troop deployments in the
Middle East aren't there to
protect the people, who constitute only 2 percent of
the world population.)

What was Iraq's number one export when the U.S. made
an alliance with Saddam
Hussein, sold him biological and chemical weapons
agents, and then did not
object when he gassed his own people?

For what major Iraqi resource has Saddam Hussein
denied contracts with the
largest U.S. and U.K. multinational companies? (Note,
those companies are the #2
(ExxonMobil), #4 (BP-Amoco), #8 (Shell) and #14
(ChevronTexaco) largest
companies in the world, and the Bush Administration
has been known to listen
when large energy corporations speak.)

For what Iraqi resource did French and Russian
multinational companies receive
lucrative contracts from Saddam Hussein? What valuable
commodity does one
reprehensible, megalomaniacal tyrant (Saddam Hussein)
control that another
reprehensible, megalomaniacal tyrant (Kim Chong-il)
does not?

How do the White House and State Department plan to
pay for a post-Saddam
occupation and reconstruction?

The answer to all of these questions is oil, of
course. Oil obviously drives U.S.
policy in the Middle East. So who can doubt that this
war in Iraq concerns oil?

Meanwhile, the justifications the Administration has
made for this war can be
rather easily dismissed. Contrary to Administration
assertions, a war against Iraq
will not be in self-defense: Iraq does not pose an
imminent threat to the United
States. It doesn't have the ability, nor has it ever
had the ability, to shoot a missile
or send a bomber to harm America. Iraq does not
possess nuclear weapons.
Furthermore, there is no credible evidence that Iraq
had anything to do with the
terrorist attacks of 9/11.

No credible link between Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda
has been made. Iraq did
not have anything to do with the anthrax-containing
letters that killed several
Americans.

Contrary to the Administration's portrayal of an Iraqi
threat, Iraq is hardly
uniquely threatening. Sixteen other countries in the
world have or might have
nuclear weapons, 25 countries have or might have
chemical weapons, 19 other
countries have or might have biological weapons, and
16 other countries have or
might have missile systems. Yet the Bush
Administration is not on the verge of
invading them.

Contrary to their denials that this war has anything
to do with oil, Donald
Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz and Richard Perle wanted to
go to war in Iraq long
before they became Secretary of Defense, Deputy
Secretary of Defense and
Chairman of the Defense Policy Board. In a 1998 letter
they sent to then-President
Clinton, they stated "it hardly needs to be added that
if Saddam does acquire the
capability to deliver weapons of mass destruction ...
a significant portion of the
world's supply of oil will all be put at hazard... The
only acceptable strategy is ...
to undertake military action as diplomacy is clearly
failing. In the long term, it
means removing Saddam Hussein and his regime from
power. That now needs to
become the aim of American foreign policy."

Does President Bush's war in Iraq concern Iraq's oil?
Obviously.

Presidential candidate and Congressman Dennis Kucinich
(D-OH) is the
ranking Democrat on the House Subcommittee on National
Security, Emerging
Threats, and International Relations. Visit
www.kucinich.us.
Mission Statement
The People Behind TAPATT
TAPATT's Vision
Feedback
Public Opinion Polls
Reference Material
Feedback
Home
Indices of Columns
Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1