http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=31008
By: Prof. Peter Dale Scott
Date: 2012-05-23
Peter Dale Scott is a frequent contributor to Global Research. Global Research Articles by Peter Dale Scott
The article is reproduced in accordance with Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.
By: Prof. Peter Dale Scott
Date: 2012-05-23
Preface for a North American Audience
I delivered the following remarks at an anti-NATO conference held in Moscow on May 15, 2012. Unlike other speakers, my paper urged Russians -- despite the expansionist and aggressive activities in Central Asia of the CIA, SOCOM, and NATO -- to cooperate under neutral auspices with like-minded Americans, towards dealing with the related crises of Afghan drug production and drug-financed Salafi jihadism.
I delivered the following remarks at an anti-NATO conference held in Moscow on May 15, 2012. Unlike other speakers, my paper urged Russians -- despite the expansionist and aggressive activities in Central Asia of the CIA, SOCOM, and NATO -- to cooperate under neutral auspices with like-minded Americans, towards dealing with the related crises of Afghan drug production and drug-financed Salafi jihadism.
Since the
conference I have continued to reflect intensely on the battered state
of U.S.-Russian relations, and my own slightly utopian response to it.
Although the speakers at the conference represented many different
viewpoints, they tended all to share a deep anxiety about US intentions
towards Russia and the other former states of the USSR. Their anxiety
was based on shared knowledge of past American actions and broken
promises, of which they (unlike most Americans) are only too aware.
A key example of
such broken promises was the assurance that NATO would not take
advantage of détente to expand into Eastern Europe. Today of course
Poland is a member of NATO, and there are still proposals on the table
to expand NATO also into the Ukraine – i.e. the very heart of the former
Soviet Union. This push was matched by U.S. joint activities and
operations – some of them under NATO auspices – with the army and
security forces of Uzbekistan. (These began in 1997 – i.e. in the
Clinton administration.)
Some of the
conferees I spoke to see Russia has having been threatened for two
decades after World War Two by active US and UK plans for a nuclear
first strike against Russia, before it could gain nuclear parity. While
obviously these plans were never implemented, those I spoke to were sure
that the ultras who desired them have never abandoned their desire to
humiliate Russia and reduce it to a third-rate power. I cannot refute
this concern: my recent book American War Machine also sees a relentless
push since World War Two to establish and sustain global American
dominance in the world.
Thus the
conference speakers were bitterly opposed to Putin’s endorsement, as
recently as April 11 of this year, of NATO’s military efforts in
Afghanistan. They are particularly incensed by Putin’s agreement this
year to the establishment of a NATO base in Ulianovsk, two hundred
kilometers east of Moscow in Russia itself. Although the base has been
sold to the Russian public as a way to facilitate US withdrawal from
Afghanistan, one speaker assured the conference that the Ulianovsk
outpost is described in NATO documents as a military base. And they
resent Russia’s support of the US-inspired UN sanctions against Iran;
they see Iran instead as a natural ally of Russia against American
efforts to achieve global domination.
Apart from the
remarks below, I was mostly silent at the conference. But my mind,
almost my conscience, is heavy when I think of the recent revelations
that Rumsfeld and Cheney, immediately after 9/11, responded with an
agenda to remove several governments friendly to Russia, including Iraq,
Libya, Syria and Iran.[1] (Ten years earlier the neocon
Richard Perle told Gen. Wesley Clark in the Pentagon that America had a
window of opportunity to remove exactly these Russian clients, in the
period of Russian restructuring after the breakup of the USSR.)
What we have
seen, even under Obama, looks very much like a progressive
implementation of this agenda, even if we acknowledge that in Libya and
now Syria Obama has shown much greater reluctance to put large numbers
of US boots on the ground. (Small numbers of US Special Forces were
reportedly active in both countries, stirring up resistance to first
Qaddafi and now Assad.)
What
particularly concerns me is the relative absence of public response in
America to a long-term Pentagon-CIA agenda of aggressive military
expansion – of dominationism, if you will. No doubt many Americans may
think that a global pax Americana will secure a period of peace, much
like the pax Romana of two millennia ago. I myself am confident that it
will not: rather, like the imperfect pax Britannica of a century ago, it
will lead inevitably to a major conflict, possibly another nuclear war.
For the secret of the pax Romana was that Rome, under Hadrian, withdrew
from Mesopotamia and accepted strict limits to its area of dominance.
Britain never achieved that wisdom until too late; America, to date, has
never achieved it at all.
And so very few
in America seem to care about Washington’s global domination project. We
have seen much critical examination of why America fought in Vietnam,
and even the American involvement in atrocities like the Indonesian
massacre of 1965. Authors like Noam Chomsky and Bill Blum have
chronicled America’s criminal acts since World War Two. But only a few,
like Chalmers Johnson and Andrew Bacevich, have written about the
progressive consolidation of a war machine that now dominates America’s
political processes.
The nascent
Occupy movement has little to say about America’s unprovoked wars; I am
not sure they have even targeted the militarization of surveillance, law
enforcement, and detention camps – the so-called “continuity of
government” (COG) measures by which America’s military planners have
prepared never again to have to deal with a successful American anti-war
movement.
If I were to
return to Russia I would again, as a former diplomat and as a Canadian,
call for US-Russian collaboration to deal with the world’s pressing
problems. But for a week I have been wondering whether I have not
perhaps been blinding myself to the realities of America’s intransigent
strive towards dominance.[2] Here in London I have just met
with an old friend from my diplomatic days, a senior UK diplomat and
Russian expert. I was hoping that he would dissuade me from my negative
assessment of US and NATO intentions, but if anything he increased them.
So I am now
publishing my talk with this preface for a North American audience – to
see who if anyone shares my concerns, and to learn what steps if any are
being taken to remedy them. I believe that the most urgent task today
to preserve the peace of the world is to curb America’s drive towards
dominationism, and to re-energize the UN”s prohibition of unilateral and
preemptive wars, for the sake of coexistence in a peaceful and
multilateral world.
Notes
[1] Rumsfeld
initially wanted to respond to 9/11 with an attack against Iraq rather
than Afghanistan, on the grounds that there were “no good targets in
Afghanistan.”
[2]
Two nights ago I had a vivid and unnerving dream, in which at the end I
saw the opening of a conference where I would again speak as I did in
Moscow. Immediately after my talk the conference agenda called for a
discussion of the possibility that “Peter Dale Scott” was a fiction
serving some nefarious covert end, and that no real “Peter Dale Scott”
in fact existed.
Presentation to Anti-NATO Conference, Moscow, May 15, 2012
I wish to thank the organizers of this conference for the chance to speak about the acute problem of the Afghan drug traffic, a current threat to both Russia and U.S.-Russian relations. I will discuss today the deep political perspective of my book Drugs, Oil, and War, which looks at factors underlying the international drug traffic and also U.S. interventions harmful to the interests of both the Russian and American people. I will also talk about the role of NATO in facilitating strategies for U.S. hegemony in Asia. But first I want to look at the drug traffic in the light of an important factor that is prominent in my book: the role of oil in U.S. policies for Asia, and also the role of the major international U.S.-aligned oil companies, including BP.
I wish to thank the organizers of this conference for the chance to speak about the acute problem of the Afghan drug traffic, a current threat to both Russia and U.S.-Russian relations. I will discuss today the deep political perspective of my book Drugs, Oil, and War, which looks at factors underlying the international drug traffic and also U.S. interventions harmful to the interests of both the Russian and American people. I will also talk about the role of NATO in facilitating strategies for U.S. hegemony in Asia. But first I want to look at the drug traffic in the light of an important factor that is prominent in my book: the role of oil in U.S. policies for Asia, and also the role of the major international U.S.-aligned oil companies, including BP.
Oil
has been a deep driving force behind all recent U.S. and NATO offensive
actions: one has only to think about Afghanistan in 2001, Iraq in 2003,
and Libya in 2011.[1]
My
book studies the role of oil companies and their representatives in
Washington (including lobbies) in all of the major U.S. interventions
since Vietnam in the 1960s.[2]
The power of U.S. oil companies may need a little explanation to an
audience in Russia, where oil companies are controlled by the state. In
America the relationship is almost reversed: oil companies tend to
dominate both U.S. foreign policy and also the U.S. Congress.[3]
This explains why presidents from Kennedy to Reagan to Obama have been
powerless to limit the oil industry’s special tax break called the oil
depletion allowance, even now when most Americans are sinking deeper
into poverty.[4]
The
underlying cause of U.S. activity in Central Asia, in traditional areas
of Russian influence like Kazakhstan, lies in the heightened interest
of western oil companies and their representatives in Washington, for
three decades or longer, in developing and above all controlling the
underdeveloped oil and gas resources of the Caspian basin.[5]
To this end Washington has developed policies that have produced
forward bases in Kyrgyzstan and for four years in Uzbekistan (2001-05).[6]
The overt purpose of these bases was to support U.S. military
operations in Afghanistan. But the U.S. presence also encourages the
governments in nearby Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan, both areas of U.S.
oil and gas investment, to act more independently of Russian approval.
Washington
serves the interest of western oil companies, not just because of their
corrupt influence over the administration, but because the survival of
the current U.S. petro-economy depends on western domination of the
global oil trade. A passage in Drugs, Oil, and War describes this
policy, and how it has contributed to recent American interventions, and
also the impoverishment of the Third World since 1980. In essence, the
U.S. handled the quadrupling of oil prices in the 1970s by arranging, by
means of secret agreements with the Saudis, for the recycling of
petrodollars back into the U.S. economy. The first of these deals
assured a special and on-going Saudi stake in the health of the U.S.
dollar; the second secured continuing Saudi support for the pricing of
all OPEC oil in dollars.[7]
These two deals assured that the U.S. economy would not be impoverished
by OPEC oil price hikes. The heaviest burdens would be borne instead by
the economies of less developed countries.[8]
The
U.S. dollar, weakening as it is, still depends largely on the OPEC
policy of demanding U.S. dollars for payment of OPEC oil. Just how
strongly America will enforce this OPEC policy can be seen by the fate
of those countries that have chosen to challenge it. “Saddam Hussein in
2000 insisted Iraq's oil be sold for euros, a political move, but one
that improved Iraq's recent earnings thanks to the rise in the value of
the euro against the dollar."[9]
Three years later, in March 2003, America invaded Iraq. Two months
after that, on May 22, 2003, Bush by executive order decreed that Iraqi
oil sales would be returned from euros to dollars.[10]
Shortly
before the 2011 NATO intervention in Libya, Qaddafi, according to a
Russian article, initiated a movement, like Saddam Hussein’s, to refuse
the dollar for oil payments.[11] Meanwhile Iran, in February 2009, announced that it had “completely stopped conducting oil transactions in U.S. dollars.”[12] The full consequences of Iran’s daring move have yet to be seen.[13]
I
repeat: every recent U.S. and NATO intervention has served to prop up
the waning dominance of western oil companies over the global oil and
petrodollar system. But I believe that oil companies themselves are
capable of initiating or at least contributing to political
interventions. As I say in my book (p.8):
There
are recurring allegations that US oil companies, either directly or
through cutouts, engage in covert operations; in Colombia (as we shall
see) a US security firm working for Occidental Petroleum took part in a
Colombian army military operation "that mistakenly killed 18 civilians.”
More
relevant to Russia was a 2002 covert operation in Azerbaijan, a classic
exercise in deep politics. There former CIA operatives, employed by a
dubious oil firm (MEGA Oil), “engaged in military training, passed
‘brown bags filled with cash’ to members of the government, and set up
an airline…which soon was picking up hundreds of mujahideen mercenaries
in Afghanistan.”[14]
These mercenaries, eventually said to number 2000, were initially used
to combat Russian-backed Armenian forces in the disputed region of
Nagorno-Karabakh; but they also backed Muslim fighters in Chechnya and
Dagestan. They also contributed to the establishment of Baku as a
transshipment point for Afghan heroin to both the Russian urban market
and also the Chechen mafia.[15]
In
1993 they also contributed to the ouster of Azerbaijan’s elected first
president, Abulfaz Elchibey, and his replacement by Heidar Aliyev, who
then agreed to a major oil contract with BP, including what eventually
became the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline to Turkey. Note that the U.S.
background of the MEGA Oil operatives is unmistakable. However who
financed MEGA is unclear; and may have been the oil majors, many of
which have or have had their own covert services.[16]
There are allegations that major oil corporations, including Exxon and
Mobil as well as BP, were “behind the coup d’état” replacing Elchibey
with Aliyev.[17]
It
is clear that Washington and the oil majors have a common perception
that their survival depends on maintaining their present dominance of
international oil markets. In the 1990s, when it was widely believed
that the world’s largest unproven reserves of hydrocarbons lay in the
Caspian basin of Central Asia, this region became the central focus for
both corporate U.S. petroinvestment and also for U.S. security
expansion.[18]
Clinton’s
close friend Strobe Talbott, speaking as Deputy Secretary of State,
attempted to put forward a reasonable strategy for this expansion. In an
important speech of July 21, 1997,
Talbott
outlined four dimensions of U.S. support to the countries of the
Caucasus and Central Asia: 1) The promotion of democracy; 2) The
creation of free market economies; 3) The sponsorship of peace and
cooperation within and among the countries of the region: and, 4)
integration into the larger international community.… Inveighing against
what he considers an outdated conception of competition in the Caucasus
and Central Asia, Mr. Talbott admonished any who would consider the
"Great Game" as a model on which to base current views of the region. He
proposed, instead, an arrangement where everyone cooperates and
everyone wins.[19]
But
this multipolar approach was immediately attacked by members of both
parties. Only three days later, the right-wing Heritage Foundation,
think-tank for the Republican Party, charged that, "The Clinton
Administration -- intent on placating Moscow -- has hesitated to take
advantage of the strategic opportunity to secure U.S. interests in the
Caucasus."[20]
In October this critique was echoed in a new book, The Grand
Chessboard, by former National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski,
perhaps Russia’s most important opponent in the Democratic Party.
Conceding that the “ultimate objective of American policy should be… to
shape a truly cooperative global community,” Brzezinski nonetheless
defended for now the “great game” that Talbott had rejected. “It is
imperative,” he wrote, “that no Eurasian challenger emerges, capable of …
challenging America.”[21]
Meanwhile,
behind this verbal debate, the CIA and Pentagon, through NATO, were
developing a “forward strategy” in the area that was antithetical to
Talbott’s. Under the umbrella of NATO’s Partnership for Peace (PFP)
Program, the Pentagon in 1997 began military training exercises with
Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan, as “the embryo of a NATO-led
military force in the region.”[22]
These CENTRAZBAT exercises had in mind the possible future deployment
of U.S. combat forces; and a deputy assistant secretary of defense,
Catherine Kelleher, cited “the presence of enormous energy resources” as
a justification for American military involvement.[23]
Uzbekistan, which Brzezinski singled out for its geopolitical
importance, became the linchpin of U.S. training exercises, despite
having one of the worst human rights records locally.[24]
The
American sponsored “Tulip Revolution” in Kyrgyzstan (March 2005) was
another conspicuous product of the CIA-Pentagon forward strategy
doctrine. It came at a time when George W. Bush repeatedly spoke of a
“forward strategy of freedom,” and Bush later, when visiting Georgia,
endorsed the changeover (more like a bloody coup d’etat than a
“revolution”) as an example of “spreading democracy and freedom.”[25]
But the new Bakiyev regime, in the words of Columbia University
Professor Alexander Cooley, "ran the country like a criminal syndicate.”
In particular many observers accused Bakiyev of taking over and running
the local drug traffic as a family enterprise.[26]
To some extent the Obama regime has retreated from the hegemonic Pentagon rhetoric of (in its words) “full spectrum dominance.”[27]
But it is not surprising that under Obama pressures to reduce Russian
influence (e.g. in Syria) have continued. For a half century Washington
has been divided between a minority (principally in the State
Department, like Talbott) who have envisaged a future of cooperation
with the Soviet Union, and those hegemonic hawks (principally in the CIA
and Pentagon, like William Casey, Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld) who
have pushed for a U.S. strategy of unipolar global domination.[28]
The latter have not hesitated to use drug-trafficking assets in pursuit
of this unattainable goal, notably in Indochina, Colombia, and now
Afghanistan.[29]
Significantly, the hawks have used the drug eradication strategies of the DEA (Drug Enforcement Administration) as well.[30] As I wrote in Drugs, Oil, and War (p. 89),
The
true purpose of most of these campaigns … has not been the hopeless
ideal of eradication. It has been to alter market share: to target
specific enemies and thus ensure that the drug traffic remains under the
control of those traffickers who are allies of the Colombian state
security apparatus and/or the CIA.[31]
This has been conspicuously true in Afghanistan, where the U.S. recruited former drug traffickers to join in its 2001 invasion.[32]
Later the U.S. announced a drug reduction strategy that was explicitly
limited to attacking those drug traffickers supporting the insurgents.[33]
Thus
those concerned (as I am) with reducing Afghan drug flows are faced
with a dilemma. Effective strategies against international drug
trafficking must be multilateral, and in Central Asia they will require
increased U.S.-Russian cooperation. On the other hand the energies of
the principal pro-U.S. forces currently on the ground there – notably
the CIA, U.S. armed forces, NATO, and the DEA – have in the past been
intent primarily not on cooperation but on U.S. hegemony.
The
answer I believe will lie in team efforts using the expertise and
resources of both countries, housed in bilateral or multilateral
agencies not dominated by either. A successful drug strategy will also
have to be multi-faceted, like the successful campaign in northern
Thailand, and will probably require both countries to consider
people-friendly strategies not yet adopted by either.[34]
Russia
and America share many features and concerns. They are both still
superstates, even if now losing preeminence in the face of a rising
China. As superpowers both were tempted into Afghan adventures that many
wiser heads regret. Meanwhile Afghanistan, now a ravaged country,
presents urgent problems for all three superstates: the menace of drugs,
and the related menace of terrorism.
The
whole planet has a stake in seeing Russia and America deal with these
menaces constructively and not exploitatively. And any progress made in
reducing these shared threats will hopefully be another step in the
difficult process of learning to consolidate peace.
The
last century saw a Cold War between the US and the USSR, two
superstates which both armed heavily in the name of defending their
people. The USSR lost, leaving an unstable Pax Americana much like the
Pax Britannica of the 19th century: that is, a dangerous mix of
globalizing commerce, increasing disparity of wealth and income, and
wildly excessive and expansive militarism, leading to increasing
conflict (Somalia, Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen, Libya), and increasing
danger of a possible new world war (Iran).
To preserve its perilous dominance the US today is arming against its own people, not just in defense of them.[35]
All the peoples of the world, including the American, have a stake in
seeing that expansive dominance reduced, towards a less militarist and
more multipolar world.
Notes
[1]
Less obviously, but unmistakably, oil (or in this case an oil pipeline)
was a factor also in the 1998 NATO intervention in Kosovo. See Peter
Dale Scott, Drugs, Oil, and War, 29; Peter Dale Scott, “Bosnia, Kosovo,
and Now Libya: The Human Costs of Washington’s On-Going Collusion with
Terrorists, July 29, 2011, http://japanfocus.org/-Peter_Dale-Scott/3578.
[2] Scott, Drugs, Oil, and War, 8-9,11.
[3]
Exxon for example is said to have paid no U.S. federal income tax in
2009, at a time of near-record profits (Washington Post, May 11, 2011, http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/how-much-do-oil-companies-really-pay-in-taxes/2011/05/11/AF7UNutG_story.html).
Cf. Steve Coll, Private Empire: ExxinMobil and American Power (New
York: Penguin Press, 2012), 19-20: “In some of the faraway countries
where it did business,… Exxon’s sway over local politics and security
was greater than that of the United States embassy.”
[4] Charles J. Lewis, “Obama again urges end to oil industry tax breaks,” Houston Chronicle, April 27, 2011, http://www.chron.com/business/energy/article/Obama-again-urges-end-to-oil-industry-tax-breaks-1683058.php; “Politics News: Obama Urges Congress to End Oil Subsidies,” Newsy.com, March 2, 2012, http://www.newsy.com/videos/obama-urges-congress-to-end-oil-subsidies.
[5] Cf. an article in 2001 from the Foreign Military Studies Office of Fort Leavenworth:
The
Caspian Sea appears to be sitting on yet another sea—a sea of
hydrocarbons. …The presence of these oil reserves and the possibility of
their export raises [sic] new strategic concerns for the United States
and other Western industrial powers. As oil companies build oil
pipelines from the Caucasus and Central Asia to supply Japan and the
West, these strategic concerns gain military implications. (Lester W.
Grau, “Hydrocarbons and a New Strategic Region: The Caspian Sea and
Central Asia. (Military Review [May–June 2001]. 96; quoted in Scott,
Drugs, Oil, and War, 31)
[6]
See discussion in Peter Dale Scott, "Launching the U.S. Terror War: the
CIA, 9/11, Afghanistan, and Central Asia," The Asia-Pacific Journal:
Japan Focus, March 15, 2012, http://japanfocus.org/-Peter_Dale-Scott/3723.
There have also been diplomatic discussions of a possible U.S. base in
Tajikistan: see Joshua Kucera, “U.S.: Tajikistan Wants to Host an
American Air Base,” Eurasia.net, December 14, 2010, http://www.eurasianet.org/node/62570).
[7]
David E. Spiro, The Hidden Hand of American Hegemony: Petrodollar
Recycling and International Markets (Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1999), x: "In
1974 [Treasury Secretary William] Simon negotiated a secret deal so the
Saudi central bank could buy U.S. Treasury securities outside of the
normal auction. A few years later, Treasury Secretary Michael Blumenthal
cut a secret deal with the Saudis so that OPEC would continue to price
oil in dollars. These deals were secret because the United States had
promised other industrialized democracies that it would not pursue such
unilateral policies." Cf. 103-12.
[8]
"So long as OPEC oil was priced in U.S. dollars, and so long as OPEC
invested the dollars in U.S. government instruments, the U.S. government
enjoyed a double loan. The first part of the loan was for oil. The
government could print dollars to pay for oil, and the American economy
did not have to produce goods and services in exchange for the oil until
OPEC used the dollars for goods and services. Obviously, the strategy
could not work if dollars were not a means of exchange for oil. The
second part of the loan was from all other economies that had to pay
dollars for oil but could not print currency. Those economies had to
trade their goods and services for dollars in order to pay OPEC" (Spiro,
Hidden Hand, 121).
[9]
Hoyos, Carol & Morrison, Kevin, "Iraq returns to the international
oil market," Financial Times, June 5, 2003. Cf. Coll, Private Empire,
232: “A desperate Saddam Hussein, toward the end of his time in power,
had signed production-sharing contracts with Russian and Chinese
companies, but these agreements had never been implemented.”
[10]
Scott, Road to 9/11, 190-91. Cf. also William Clark, “The Real Reasons
Why Iran is the Next Target:The Emerging Euro-denominated International
Oil Marker,” Global Research, 27 October 2004, http://globalresearch.ca/articles/CLA410A.html.
[11] “Бомбежки Ливии – наказание Каддафи за попытку введения золотого динара,” Live Journal, March 21, 2011, http://sterligov.livejournal.com/4389.html;
discussion in Peter Dale Scott, “The Libyan War, American Power and the
Decline of the Petrodollar System,” Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus,”
, April 27, 2011, http://japanfocus.org/-Peter_Dale-Scott/3522.
[12] “Iran Ends Oil Transactions In U.S. Dollars,” CBS News, February 11, 2009, http://www.cbsnews.com/2100-500395_162-4057490.html.
[13]
In March 2012 Swift, the body that handles global banking transactions,
moved to cut Iran's banks out of the system, in response to American
and UN sanctions (BBC News, March 15, 2012). Business Week (February 28,
2012) commented that the action “might roil oil markets on concern that
buyers will be unable to pay the second-largest producer in the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries for its 2.2 million
barrels a day of oil exports.”
[14] Peter Dale Scott, The Road to 9/11, 163-64; cf. Scott, Drugs, Oil, and War, 7.
[15] Scott, The Road to 9/11, 164
[16]
The World War II covert operations agency OSS was thrown together in
part by recruiting Asia hands from oil companies like Standard Oil of
New Jersey (Esso). See Smith, OSS, 15, 211.
[17] “BP oiled coup with cash, Turks claim”, Sunday Times (London), March 26, 2000; quoted in Scott, The Road to 9/11, 165.
[18]
In 1998, Dick Cheney, when chief executive of the oil services company
Hallibuton, remarked: "I cannot think of a time when we have had a
region emerge as suddenly to become as strategically significant as the
Caspian" (Guardian [London], October 23, 2001, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2001/oct/23/afghanistan.terrorism11).
[19]
R. Craig Nation, “Russia, the United States, and the Caucasus,” Army
War College (U.S.). Strategic Studies Institute,
http://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil. Talbott’s words are worth
quoting at length: “"For the last several years, it has been
fashionable to proclaim or at least to predict, a replay of the 'Great
Game' in the Caucasus and Central Asia. The implication of course is
that the driving dynamic of the region, fueled and lubricated by oil,
will be the competition of great powers to the disadvantage of the
people who live there. Our goal is to avoid and to actively discourage
that atavistic outcome. ….. The Great Game, which starred Kipling's Kim
and Fraser's Flashman, was very much of the zero-sum variety. What we
want to help bring about is just the opposite, we want to see all
responsible players in the Caucasus and Central Asia be winners." (M.K.
Bhadrakumar, “Foul Play in the Great Game,” Asia Times, July 13, 2005, http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/GG13Ag01.html).
[20] James MacDougall, “A
New Stage in U.S.-Caspian Sea Basin Relations,” Central Asia, 5 (11),
1997, http://www.ca-c.org/dataeng/st_04_dougall.shtml; quoting from
Ariel Cohen, “U.S. Policy in the Caucasus and Central Asia: Building A
New"Silk Road" to Economic Prosperity,” Heritage Foundation, July 24,
1997, http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/1997/07/bg1132.
In October 1997 Sen. Sam Brownback introduced a bill, the Silk Road
Strategy Act of 1997 (S. 1344), providing incentives for the new Central
Asian states to cooperate with the United States, rather than with
Russia or Iran.
[21]
Zbigniew Brzezinski, The Grand Chessboard: American Primacy and Its
Geostrategic Imperatives (New York: Basic Books, 1997), xiv.
[22] Ariel Cohen, Eurasia In Balance: The US And The Regional Power Shift, 107.
[23]
Michael Klare, Blood and Oil (New York: Metropolitan Books/ Henry Holt,
2004), 135-36; citing R. Jeffrey Smith, “U.S. Leads Peacekeeping Drill
in Kazakhstan,” Washington Post, September 15, 1997. CF. Kenley Butler,
“U.S. Military Cooperation with the Central Asian States,” September 17,
2001, http://cns.miis.edu/archive/wtc01/uscamil.htm.
[24] Brzezinski, Grand Chessboard, 121.
[25]
Peter Dale Scott, “Kyrgyzstan, the U.S. and the Global Drug Problem:
Deep Forcesand the Syndrome of Coups, Drugs, and Terror,” Asia-Pacific
Journal: Japan Focus, http://japanfocus.org/-Peter_Dale-Scott/3384;
quoting President Bush, State of the Union address, January 20, 2004;
“Bush: Georgia’s Example a Huge Contribution to Democracy,” Civil
Georgia, May 10, 2005, http://www.civil.ge/eng/article.php?id=9838.
Likewise Zbigniew Brzezinski was quoted by a Kyrgyz news source as
saying “I believe revolutions in Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan were a
sincere and snap expression of the political will” (http://eng.24kg.org/politic/2008/03/27/4973.html, March 27, 2008).
[26]
Scott, “Kyrgyzstan, the U.S. and the Global Drug Problem;” citing 19
Owen Matthews, “Despotism Doesn’t Equal Stability,” Newsweek, April 7,
2010 (Cooley); Peter Leonard, “Heroin trade a backdrop to Kyrgyz
violence,” San Francisco Chronicle, June 24, 2010; “Kyrgyzstan Relaxes Control Over Drug Trafficking,” Jamestown Foundation, Eurasia Daily Monitor, 7:24, February 4, 2010, etc.
[27] U.S. Department of Defense, Joint Vision 2020, May 30, 2000; discussion in Scott, Road to 9/11, 20.
[28]
U.S. Gen. Wesley Clark has reported that back in 1991 one of the
neocons in the Pentagon, Paul Wolfowitz, told him that “we’ve about five
or ten years to clean up those old soviet client regimes - Syria, Iran,
Iraq -- before the next great superpower comes on to challenge us”
(Wesley Clark, Talk to Commonwealth Club, October 3, 2007,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ha1rEhovONU). Ten years later, in
November 2001, he heard in the Pentagon that plans to attack Iraq were
“being discussed as part of a five-year campaign plan, …beginning with
Iraq, then Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Iran, Somalia and Sudan” [Wesley
Clark, Winning Modern Wars (New York: PublicAffairs, 2003], 130).
[29] See Scott, American War Machine.
[30] For the hegemonic perversion of the DEA’s “war on drugs” in Asia, see Scott, American War Machine, 121-40.
[31] Scott, Drugs, Oil, and War, 89.
[32]
An example was Haji Zaman Ghamsharik who had retired to Dijon in
France, where British and American official met with him and persuaded
him to return to Afghanistan (Peter Dale Scott, “America’s Afghanistan:
The National Security and a Heroin-Ravaged State,” Asia-Pacific Journal:
Japan Focus, http://www.japanfocus.org/-Peter_Dale-Scott/3145;
citing Philip Smucker, Al Qaeda’s Great Escape: The Military and the
Media on Terror’s Trail [Washington: Brassey’s, 2004], 9. For other drug
traffickers, see Scott, Road to 9/11, 125.
[33]
Scott. American War Machine, 235 (insurgents); James Risen, “U.S. to
Hunt Down Afghan Lords Tied to Taliban,” New York Times, August 10,
2009: ”United States military commanders have told Congress that... only
those [drug traffickers] providing support to the insurgency would be
made targets.”
[34]
Russia has understandably been aggrieved by America’s and NATO’s
failure over a decade to deal seriously with the huge Afghan drug crop
(e.g. “Russia lashes out at NATO for not fighting Afghan drug
production,” RT, February 28, 2010, http://rt.com/usa/news/afghanistan-drug-heroin-nato/).
But the simple remedy Russia has proposed, destruction of crops in the
field, would by itself probably drive peasants further into the arms of
Afghanistan’s militant Islamic fundamentalists, another threat to Russia
and America alike. Many observers have noted that poppy field
eradication leaves the small farmers in debt to the landowners and
traffickers, often having to repay “in cash, land, livestock, or – not
infrequently – a daughter…. Poppy eradication just pushed them deeper
into the poverty that led to their growing opium in the first place”
(Joel Hafvenstein, Opium Season: A Year on the Afghan Frontier, 214);
cf. “Opium Brides,” PBS Frontline, http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/afghanistan-pakistan/opium-brides/transcript-15/).
Opium eradication in Thailand, often cited as the most successful
program anywhere since China’s in the 1950s, was achieved by combining
military enforcement with comprehensive alternative development
programs. See William Byrd and Christopher Ward, "Drugs and Development
in Afghanistan," World Bank: Conflict Prevention and Reconstruction
Unit, Working paper series, Vol. 18 (December 2004); also “Secret of
Thai success in opium war,” BBC News, February 19, 2009, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7899748.stm.
[35]
See e.g. Peter Dale Scott, "Is the State of Emergency Superseding our
Constitution? Continuity of Government Planning, War and American
Society," Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus, November 28, 2010,
http:/1/japanfocus.org/-Peter_Dale-Scott/3448.
Peter Dale Scott is a frequent contributor to Global Research. Global Research Articles by Peter Dale Scott
The article is reproduced in accordance with Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.
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