Greater Middle East ; Russia and Allies to Call the Shots !
Author's note ;The world is passing through a very critical period in human history .This piece is meant for those interested in external events and its ramifications on India ( most Indians are ignoranti , watching their navals or stupid fulminations against failed state Pakistan or talking about a Hindutva past ,far from truth or even rationality –God Save India from Hindutva forces )
After the collapse of the Berlin Wall and the Soviet Union in 1990 – 91, unfortunately a very retrograde human development , words like science ,socialism and equality have disappeared and the neo-con led neo- liberal capitalism and emergence of religions in its very primitive forms with their harmful religious practices and beliefs have been enforced throughout the world.
To any sane mind it should be clear that it should not and cannot last long, in humanity's progress towards equality .Science cannot and should not be banished except at great peril to human civilisation , progress and humanity itself. Like in medieval era Catholic Popes punishing Galeleo for his scientific truths against obscure and primitive religious beliefs and practices .
Since retiring as ambassador to Turkey and Azerbaijan in 1996, the author has written nearly 400 articles for major newspapers ,websites etc which have been translated into 12 major languages of the world. Having been posted to Cairo, Algiers and Amman (1989 – 92 when Saddam Hussein was fooled into invading Kuwait,) and Turkey (two postings and total stay of 10 years ) a large number of articles have been on the greater Middle East.
It would appear that since the election of Vladimir Putin as the leader of the Russian Federation ( he has support of almost 80% of Russians ) , time has now come to oppose the West , after a series of US led devastating blunders which have cost populations in south-east Asia, greater Middle East in millions of lives and destruction of many countries.
Finally, there seems to be an end insight of the rampaging uncivilised state of America, which was born after the migration and colonisation of West Europeans mostly English to the new continent, genocide of original inhabitants of what is now known as USA .After WWII, US's rampaging military has led destruction all around the world. In USA the power is built around Rockefellers and other Jewish families and Jews , who control the banks ,energy and armament sectors and in London ,the Cityof the Rothshields.
Throughout history ,mostly it is the barbarian nations who invade civilised and sedentary communities and states. So it has been from the West to the East from the end of the 17th century when the Ottoman Turks are stopped at the gates of Vienna .It now appears that time has come for a turnaround with Russia under Putin making a stand in Syria with a ; enough is enough. It is being joined by China and Iran among others .The destruction brought about by criminal US elite, British poodles , sometimes joined by the French has been terrible in the region . Countries have been destroyed , millions have been killed and tens of millions made homeless and refugees .
The present-day boundaries and frontiers of the greater Middle East were created after WWI following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. Russia had little role in that . USA was a faraway rising power .The victorious powers were led by UK, France and other Europeans .
(When US or Poodle UK talk of international Community, mostly it is them with France and some obscure island nations in the pacific)
Now Middle East has already a Shia Iraqi state, an almost independent state in Kurdish north Iraq, territories controlled by Kurds in north-west Syria , south of Turkey's border. Quite clearly Syria will not remain what it was before the rebellion; financed, with many rebels trained by USA and its NATO allies specially Turkey, with funds from Saudi Arabia, Qatar etc. A Sunni Arab state could emerge after negotiations in areas now controlled and abused by Sunni ISIS .Because of hair brained ,Islamist and expansionist crazy policies ,Ankara would also suffer .
It may be noted that Moscow did not intervene when US,UK ,France and Italy destroyed a flourishing Libyan state ( now in tatters and home to Muslim extremists and Jihadis ).Russia did not have vital strategic interests there, and it was too distant to resist .It gave time to prepare for the expected US led Western aggression, which came as close as Ukraine itself , against all agreements and international treaties . But Moscow had maintained its strategic naval and military assets and presence on the Syrian Mediterranean Coast
I'm reproducing at the end one of the many scores of articles I wrote on the US led illegal invasion of Iraq in 2003.
http://tarafits.blogspot.com/2011/12/50-articles-on-us-led-illegal-war-on.html
After the resistance put up by Iraqi population against the American GIs, against all odds , the cowardly US have dared not place boots on the ground in the Middle East except some special forces or its proxies from the Arab world.
Putin at the UN: ISIS and unipolarity will be buried together
September 29, 2015 –
(The following was sent by Russian Embassy in Delhi to Indian Govt )
PRESS RELEASE
New Delhi, September 30, 2015
The Embassy of the Russian Federation in India officially informed the Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India, that in accordance with the request of H.E. Mr Bashar al-Assad, President of the Syrian Arab Republic, for providing military assistance in fighting against ISIS and other terrorist groups in Syria the Russian Federation begins air and rocket attacks on terrorist locations on all territory of the Syrian Arab Republic on September 30, 2015.
Regards,
Tanya K.,
  
  Press Attaché
  Embassy of the Russian Federation
  New Delhi
  Shantipath, Chanakyapuri
Translated for Fort Russ by J. Arnoldski
  
  
  
  
  
  
"Putin at the UN: It was steeper than  Munich"
  
  
Let's note a simple thing which is absolutely essential  for understanding what happened in New York. The Kremlin, and this is already  absolutely obvious, is going to put an end to ISIS. This will solve several  Russian problems and give Russia some tangible bonuses:
  
  
We will eliminate a terrorist threat to our country at a distance. Every ISISer killed in Syria is an ISISer which didn't come to Russia to fight;
Retaining control over Syria, we will permanently suspend the project of the Qatar-EU gas pipeline, which is a dream of the USA. The Russian gas stranglehold around the neck of Europe will remain in place, and this is very important;
Eliminating ISIS in Syria and Iraq, we will cut off the supply of smuggled oil, which is sold at dumping prices, to world markets. This alone will pay for any military operation against ISIS within a few months, if not a few weeks.
Russia, keeping the gas stranglehold around the neck of the EU, will remove another noose around the neck of Europe - the American slipknot in the form of an influx of refugees allegedly fleeing ISIS. American NGO's, which are massively organizing an "exodus of Arabs to the EU" will collapse, and after the defeat of ISIS, EU residents will not be forced to accept millions of refugees, even if they show hundreds more staged photos of children's corpses;
Russia will fix itself among the main "providers of security" in the Middle East. This position is expensive in the most literal sense, as the main trade routes of the planet intersect the Middle East and the main sources of hydrocarbons are located there.
  In his own time, Putin blocked the military intervention  of the USA in Syria, and now Putin himself is actually leading a military  intervention in Syria, and the US can't do anything about it. It's enough to  understand who has won and who has lost the game. The US tried to intervene and  failed. Russia, by forces of an international coalition, will conduct an  intervention, and after yesterday it has become clear that the US already can't  stop it. Of course, they will put sticks in the wheels, but Washington already  can't block the process. 
If someone thought that Obama expressed himself harshly and "showed" Russia, then this impression is solely from a misunderstanding of the situation. The confrontational variant of the statements of the leader of the US should sound like this: "Russia is the enemy of democracy, it is an aggressor, a rogue state. The international community cannot allow this country to intervene in the situation in Syria under the guise of fighting terrorism. Russia is a threat to the world on par with ISIS and the Ebola virus, as I've already said. If Moscow and its allies will attempt to conduct a military operation in Syria, we and our allies will be forced to take drastic measures of political, economic, and military nature." This would be confrontational. It was specifically this which the part of the elite which sponsored and fostered ISIS, and which relied on ISIS as the main geopolitical weapon of the US in the "new American century," demanded from Obama. From the point of view of this very significant and influential part of the American elite this is probably happening: Putin is going to destroy assets (expensive and needed assets!) of respected American elites, and the American president is smiling at the camera talking about how it's important that "girls go to school," that he recognizes that the US cannot solve the world's problems, and he also allows for the possibility of constructive cooperation over Syria with Tehran and Moscow! Yes, he said that Assad must go, but everyone understands that, after the destruction of ISIS, the fate of Assad will clearly not be decided in Washington.
Imagine that you bought an expensive sports car. A certain Vladimir approached it with a bat and clear intention to break its glass, puncture its tires, and even turn it into scrap metal. Summoned to the place of this act of geopolitical vandalism, the black cop Barry, instead of shooting, starts drinking champagne with Vladimir and discusses "constructive cooperation." The indignation of the American elites can be understood, and in this context the tirade of experts and neoconservatives from Fox News, who complain about the "shocking return of Russia" to the political olympics, is quite understandable.
It's necessary to understand that the behavior of the part  of the American elite which stands behind Obama, and who refused to go to  direct confrontation over Syria, was not caused by a surge of humanity, but has  a purely rational calculation underlying it. If the neo-conservatives - and  they are among the Democrats (the Clintons) and the Republicans (the Koches and  Kagans) - hope that with the aid of "controlled chaos" they can drive the rest  of the world back to 1993, the more reasonable part of the elite (the moderate  Democrats and moderate Republicans) understand that attempting to maintain  global hegemony in the current environment will most likely end in not only a  loss of hegemony, but losing everything in general. Actually, we are witnessing  an attempt to return to 2010 within the framework of the G20, when  breakthroughs were achieved in agreeing in terms of dividing spheres of  influence and reforming the global financial system. How successful this return  will be depends on the outcome of the intra-elite struggle in the United  States. This can be judged only after a few months. 
  
  
In the framework of the UN session and subsequent negotiations, an unprecedented tough stance of Beijing was recorded:
  
  
"Measures to combat terrorism can only be undertaken on the basis of the UN Charter and respecting state sovereignty and territorial integrity, and China supports Russia's actions in this sphere," a representative of the Foreign Ministry of China noted, as reported by TASS.
  
  
Support over Syria is good, but even more significant is the specific, targeted "kick" at the American neoconservatives in Xi's speech.
  
  
His statement that "absolute security for one country" is unattainable is a reference as straight as an arrow to the fundamental concept of the ideology of American neo-conservatives, who believe that "absolute security" is the main value and the main purpose of foreign policy, the achievement of which justifies any crimes and any violations of international law. The principle of "absolute security" is the cornerstone of the "project for a new American century," of overwhelmingly influential American NGO's under the management of Robert Kagan, the husband of Victoria Nuland. The doctrine of a "new American century" became the theoretical foundation for the interventions in Iraq and Libya, the color revolutions, and the Arab Spring. Comrade Xi in fact said that there is no "new American century." The speech of the Chinese leader deserves a separate and careful analysis, to which I hope to return in the future.
  
  
We are moving towards a period of radical changes in the global political and economic system. The sprout of these changes was indicated in New York.
  
  
Specifically, Putin harshly criticized the TTIP agreement, through which the US attempted to "gobble up" the economy of Europe, just as the EU uses "association agreements" against weaker countries. The Russian president outlined a statement for blocking the agreement which is fundamental for the US, and which for several years they have tried to push behind closed doors in spite of the resistance of European business, which really doesn't want to die.
  
  
Putin strongly suggested that the US calm itself down, and offered Europe a Chinese-Russian model of economic integration in a common space of trade and security. This is a very serious claim with very serious consequences. As your obedient servant already wrote, "we need Berlin."
  
  
Another statement with far-reaching consequences was voiced by Nursultan Nazarbayev, who outlined the need for creating a supranational reserve currency, that is, he in fact suggested sending the dollar into retirement. The president of Kazakhstan continues the Asian political tradition: radical proposals are voiced by Nazarbayev, and then they suddenly find support in Beijing and Moscow. But that's a topic for another piece.
  
  
The results of the UN assembly session are the following:
  
  
The unipolar world is dead and will never recover
A team of gravediggers of the unipolar world has been formed and is getting to work
ISIS has all the chances to find peace alongside the unipolar world
The battle for the EU is entering a new phase and the Sino-Russian team has all the chances to win it
By the spur of the moment, Russia is becoming one of the leaders of the Muslim world because of its role as the coordinator of the anti-ISIL coalition.
  Everyone is implicated: King Abdullah, Nazarbayev, Xi, and, of course, Vladimir  Vladimirovich, and they worked wonderfully. Everything that could have  practically happened happened. 
The ground situation in Middle east before the US led illegal invasion of Iraq in 2003
27 August , 2002
ASIA TIMES online Hongkong-Bangkok <www.atimes.com> 27 August,2002
Middle East
COMMENTARY
  
  
An entire region from Jordan to Iran is on the brink of catastrophe as it awaits one man's decision on how he will pursue his family' vendetta .India's former Ambassador to Jordan looks inside the Pandora's box which George Bush holds in his hands. Editor
The Bush family's phony wars by K Gajendra Singh www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/DH27Ak01.html
For the Bush family, Iraqi  President Saddam Hussein is the tempting Apple in the Middle Eastern Garden of  Eden. The results of succumbing to the temptation to take a bite could be as  disastrous as they were for Adam and Eve. 
  
  In 1991 George Bush Sr sought the removal of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. He  failed and left the region in a mess. Now his son, President George W Bush,  having inherited Dick Cheney and other chieftains from his father's presidency,  is pursuing the family vendetta. Ordinary Iraqis continue to pay the price of  this vendetta, with more than half a million children reported to have died  from lack of medicines and malnutrition since the 1990 embargo. Iraq's  US-friendly neighbors like Jordan  and Turkey  are suffering too. Even during the hiatus of Bill Clinton's presidency, Iraq was not  spared: it was bombed whenever Clinton's  popularity went down or he got deeper into the Monica Lewinsky mess. 
  
  It is difficult to know what to believe of the leaks regarding the US's current  options to oust Saddam, ranging from assassination, fomenting a coup or  internal rebellion, air strikes against Baghdad  and other Iraqi command centers, to a vast amphibious invasion with massive air  support, involving up to 250,000 soldiers. The latest plan, involving around  60,000 troops backed by heavy air power, will begin with a swift attack on  Saddam's elite Republican Guards around Baghdad,  in the hope that the regular Iraqi army would then abandon Saddam. Such  balderdash. The result of any such actions could be as catastrophic as Adam and  Eve's expulsion from the Garden of Eden. However, there is room for hope that  worse may not come to worst: a saving grace of the US constitutional system of checks  and balances is that Bush may be the most powerful man in the world, but he  can't ignore Congress. And, however much George Bush Sr might hate Saddam, he  would not want his son's presidency to end in disgrace.
Secretary of State Colin  Powell, one of a few sane voices in the administration, remains opposed to a  military strike just as he was in 1991, as it has no clear strategic  objectives. Recent media leaks from the Pentagon and the State Department  suggested that "many senior US military officers contend that  Saddam Hussein poses no immediate threat and that the United States  should continue its policy of containment rather than invade Iraq".  Soon another leak countered that some in the Establishment favored an  "inside-out" plan to "take Baghdad  and one or two key command centers and weapons depots first, in hopes of  cutting off the country's leadership and causing a quick collapse of the  government". Such a plan was once dismissed by General Anthony Zinni, the  US Middle East envoy, as a recipe for a "Bay of Goats"  disaster, like the 1961 Bay of Pigs fiasco in Cuba. (Remember  too the mess of Jimmy Carter's 1979 attempt to rescue US hostages in Iran.) 
  
  As Powell knows, there are no clearly defined strategic objectives for an  attack on Iraq.  Instead, Bush has his hands on a Pandora's Box that would release incalculable  forces and consequences if he were to open it. One of these in calculables, for  example, is Jordan's Prince Hassan. The prince's unexpected appearance at a  mid-July Western-rigged assembly of disunited and disgruntled Iraqi opposition  leaders led to speculation that he might even emerge as a new consensus ruler  of post-Saddam Iraq.  
  
  King Abdullah of Jordan  has himself repeatedly refuted reports that the US could use his country as a base  for attacking Iraq,  and furthermore has warned that an attack would further destabilize the region.  This is also the consensus of many strategic analysts. But Hassan's cameo  appearance remains intriguing. An intellectual, married to late Indian vice  president M Hidayatullah's niece, Hassan was crown prince for decades. But just  before his death, King Hussein - Hassan's elder brother - anointed his eldest  son Abdullah, from his British wife, as the next king, and made another son,  Hamza, from his American wife, the new crown prince, thus creating some  emotional Anglo-Saxon vested interest in the perpetuation of the Hashemite  dynasty. (The last Iraqi king, Feisel II, was Hassan's cousin and was assassinated  after a military coup in 1958.) 
  
  Background and seeds of disputes
  The Tigris and Euphrates basin has a turbulent  history. The armies of Islam carved an empire from the Atlantic  to China  in the Seventh Century, and the Arabian peninsula  became part of it. After Ottoman Sultan annexed the caliphate and guardianship  of Mecca and Medina, the peninsula  became a peaceful backwater until World War I. But when Turkey sided  with Germany,  Britain,  to protect its Indian possession and the Suez Canal  lifeline, encouraged Arabs under Hashemite ruler Sharif Hussein of Hijaj to  revolt against the caliph in Istanbul  (and deputed spy T E Lawrence to help out). The war's end did not bring freedom  to the Arabs as promised; at the same time, by secret Sykes-Picot agreement,  the British and French arbitrarily divided the sultan's Arab domains and their  warring populations of Shi'ites, Sunnis, Alawite Muslims, Druse, and  Christians. The French took most of greater Syria, dividing it into Syria and  Christian-dominated Lebanon.  The British kept Palestine,   Iraq and the  rest of Arabia. 
  
  When Sharif Hussein's son Emir Feisel arrived to claim Damascus, Syria,  the French chased him out. So the British installed him on the Iraqi throne.  When the other son, Emir Abdullah, turned up in Amman, British Prime Minister  Winston Churchill, dining in a Jerusalem hotel, reportedly drew on a napkin the  borders of a new Emirate of Trans-Jordan, encompassing wasteland vaguely  claimed by Syrians, Saudis and Iraqis. 
  
  Later, as Sharif Hussein (who wanted the Caliphate after Ataturk had abolished  it) proved obdurate to the British viewpoint, Britain let Ibn Saud and his  Wahhabis hound him out of Mecca.  Britain  also denied Kemal Ataturk's new Turkish republic the oil-rich Kurdish areas of Mosul and Kirkuk, now in northern Iraq. To thwart  Germany  posing a danger to India  via the Berlin-Basra railroad, the British had earlier propped up oil-rich Kuwait,  traditionally ruled by Ottoman pashas in Basra.  This throttled Iraqi access to the Persian Gulf.  Iraq  became somewhat (though not fully!) reconciled to an independent Kuwait only in  1961. 
  
  By 1917 Britain's  Balfour Declaration had also promised a homeland for Jews in Palestine. European Jews began emigrating to Palestine, and the  trickle became a flood with the rise of anti-Semitic policies in Nazi Germany  and elsewhere in Europe. After World War II,  the state of Israel,  carved out of British Palestine, was not recognized by the Arabs. The 1948  Arab-Israeli war allowed Israel  to expand its area, while Jordan  annexed the West Bank and Egypt took over  Gaza. In the  Six-Day War of 1967, Israel  captured the West bank and Gaza.  Thus were laid the foundations for most of the problems of the region. 
  
  Following the rise of Arab nationalism in the early 1950s led by Colonel Gamal  Nasser of Egypt,  socialists and nationalists, mostly military officers, took over the medieval  kingdoms of Yemen,  Syria,  Iraq  and Libya  - much to the consternation of Western oil companies. 
  
  From its very inception, almost all its neighbors coveted Jordan. But  astute King Hussein not only survived a dozen assassination attempts, he also  fended off conspiracies against his land. When he died in 1999 of cancer, the  kingdom had become a keystone of equilibrium in the region and a modern flourishing  state, despite lacking oil and other resources. The sop of the Iraqi throne to  Prince Hassan could just be another trick. But it is true that rulers in the  region have patience and long memories. Even during the 1991 Gulf War it was  put about that neutrality on the part of King Hussein could lead to his kingdom  being parceled - but if he sided with the US, he might get parts of Iraq, which  after all was once a Hashemite patrimony. 
  
  Palestinians make up 60 percent of Jordan's population (some Israeli  leaders say that in Jordan Palestinians already have their own state). PLO  militants and Palestinian army officers conspired against King Hussein (King  Abdullah, his grandfather, was assassinated by a Palestinian in 1951), who  expelled the Arafat-led PLO to Beirut  in the early 1970s. 
  
  Jordan's  business community relies heavily on transit and direct trade with Iraq, and still  gets free oil from it. Thus, Prince Hassan's maneuver could cost a lot if Iraq so  decides. Before the 1991 Gulf War, Saddam Hussein had promised full support to  the Palestinian cause. During the war, King Hussein maintained neutrality  despite Western pressure, anger and bad-mouthing. Palestinians and their  leadership had fully supported Saddam in 1990-91, and Jordan's stand.  But adroit King Hussein remained a major Arab player in a Middle   East peace settlement and was brought from his death bed to bless  the White House ceremony for the Arafat-Rabin accord. Some cynics say that  Hussein never favored a powerful Palestinian state, and that suits Israel and the US. To survive  in Amman, a  Hashemite ruler has to be extremely nimble. 
  
  Gulf crisis and war, 1990-91
  The US stumbled into the 1991 war without any strategic thought or planning. In  fact, the West had supported Iraq's  long war against Khomeini's Iran,  and the US  had granted loans to Baghdad  worth billions of dollars. Amid high tension between Kuwait and Baghdad over common oil wells, two islands,  and the return of a $10 billion loan, Iraq threatened Kuwait with  war. A few days before the Iraqi invasion on August 2, 1990, US Ambassador April Glaspie told  Saddam Hussein that his dispute with Kuwait was a bilateral Arab affair.  This was never clearly refuted by the US and Ambassador Glaspie  disappeared from view. The Western media never pursued her as they do others,  and allowed themselves to become a handmaiden of the Western propaganda  machine. (Later, they wrote little about the slaughter of retreating and  surrendering Iraqi soldiers, and their credibility has declined further since then.)  Meanwhile, all attempts to find a peaceful solution to the Iraq-Kuwait row by  Arab nations, led by King Hussein of Jordan and later joined by King  Hassan of Morocco,  were rebuffed by the US,  as was Kuwait's  offer of indirect negotiations. Feelers for negotiations by the Saudis were  drowned in Western cacophony. Saddam's reported offer to the UN secretary  general to withdraw from Kuwait,  made just before the US  retaliation, was brushed aside. Efforts by Mikhail Gorbachev, who had just  unraveled the USSR,  were treated with disdain. 
  
  Post-1991 Gulf War scene
  Bush had attacked Iraq  in 1991 without informing the UN secretary general, undermining the world body  and further diminishing it. For the countries of the region, the war resolved  nothing. Instead, the US  made Kuwait,  Saudi Arabia  and other allies pay through the nose, weakening them by an estimated $100-$150  billion. Iraq  was bombed into the Middle Ages. Its enemy Iran, now a joint member of the  "Axis of Evil", was the major gainer. To guard his back, Saddam in  1990 had agreed to the old boundary with Iran in the Shatt-al Arab waterway,  disagreement over which had led to the Iran-Iraq War. 
US promises turned sour in  the aftermath of the Gulf War. George Bush Sr, without consulting his allies,  encouraged Iraqis, especially Kurds in the north and Shi'ites in the south, to  revolt. Saudi Arabia  and the Gulf states,  most of which had large Shi'ite populations, were horrified, as a Shi'ite state  in south Iraq  would strengthen Iran.  The prospect of independence for Iraqi Kurds worried Turkey, whose own Kurds were  fighting for freedom. The hapless Iraqi Kurds, now protected by the US-UK  enforced "no-fly zone", and the Shi'ites paid a terrible price. Tens  of thousands were killed by Saddam's biological and other weapons. The Iraqi  Kurds and Shi'ites still remember the false US promises. Both Kurdish factions  in north Iraq  have now expressed opposition to current US plans to attack Iraq. 
  
  Turkish President Turgut Ozal, seduced by US hints of winning "lost"  Kurdish areas of north Iraq,  had become an energetic supporter of the Bush coalition in 1990-91. He almost  opened another front in the war against Iraq, but was prevented by stiff  opposition from his powerful military. But instead of getting oil-rich Mosul and Kirkuk, the economic  sanctions against Iraq  and closure of the Iraqi pipeline via Turkey cost Ankara $50 billion in lost trade.  Unemployment rose as the sanctions halted the 5,000 trucks that used to roar to  and from Iraq  daily, aggravating the economic and social problems in Turkey's  Kurdish heartland of rebellion. A deputy prime minister once ruefully told this  writer, "Mr Ambassador, you cannot trust the Americans, not even their  written promises." A sobering thought for those who support the US blindly. 
  
  Iraq's  emasculation made Israel  feel bolder. Now Ariel Sharon wants Palestinians under Israel's heel.  But the Palestinians, the most radicalized among Arabs, will not give up.  Intifada was and is indigenous. (The PLO, now corrupted, just took the credit.)  Arab and Muslim masses the world over watch what is happening in Palestine with great  anger. This, and random US and UK  bombing of Iraq,  are among the reasons cited for the September 11 attacks on the US. Now, unlike  1991, the rage of the Arab masses could flush away many pro-US regimes. 
  
  Turkey's  NATO Incirlik air base, used regularly to bomb Iraq, was also used by the US in its war  in Afghanistan,  after allies like Saudi    Arabia had refused their bases. Turkey was also  the first Muslim country to offer troops to fight against the Taliban and  al-Qaeda, to help its ethnic Uzbek cousins led by Rashid Dostum. It had earlier  supported the Northern Alliance against Mullah  Omar's Pashtun Taliban and Osama bin Laden's Arab and Pakistani jihadis. 
  
  But watching how the Anglo-Saxons conducted their war in Afghanistan,  often bombing civilians without catching the Taliban or al-Qaeda leadership,  the Turks have had second thoughts. They were cajoled with money and other  incentives to take over the leadership of foreign forces in Afghanistan  from the British. In spite of its precarious financial situation and dependence  on the International Monetary Fund, Turkey's political and military  leaders now strongly oppose current US plans to attack Iraq. 
  
  Saddam's counter moves
  Even now, a financially squeezed Saddam Hussein sends money to families of  Palestinian suicide bombers. Iraq  has normalized relations with most Arab states in the region, including Qatar, Bahrain, Oman and the United Arab Emirates.  It has trade relations with Saudi    Arabia, and its relations with Kuwait have  thawed. Its foreign minister recently visited Algeria, Iran and Syria and met with Jordan's king. 
  
  The Beirut  summit of Arab leaders last March rejected "threats of aggression"  against Iraq,  called for lifting of sanctions, and urged everyone to respect Iraq's  independence, sovereignty, and territorial integrity. Saddam, disingenuously or  not, has indicated willingness to talk about the return of UN weapons  inspectors. United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan himself opposes renewed  US  attacks against Iraq.  
  
  Qatar  - sympathetic to Iraq  - officially opposes war, but the US has an air base at al-Udeid. The  US  also has bases in Saudi    Arabia, which opposes their use. But clients  and real estates in the Gulf and elsewhere can be bulldozed by US pressure or  show of force. 
  
  Meanwhile, US and British special forces in Afghanistan have little to show  from operations like Candor, Snipe, Anaconda, Mountain Lion etc. Al-Qaeda and  Taliban have vanished into Pakistan  and southern Afghanistan  sanctuaries. The Northern Alliance entered Kabul in spite of US opposition  and refuses to fully toe the US  line. The Afghan regime, led by former Unocal employee Hamid Karzai but  dominated by Tajiks, remains insecure. Afghanistan is returning to the  days of pre-Taliban warlords. With his US bodyguards, Pashtuns now call  Karzai "USA's  Babrak Karmal". 
  
  It is difficult to trust the US,  with its track record in Vietnam,  Afghanistan,  Somalia,  Bosnia  and Serbia.  What will Pandora's Box reveal in Iraq? How will Iran and Turkey react in  a free-for-all over Kurdish north Iraq? The US was unclear  in its strategic aims in 1991 and still is in 2002. At least there was a solid  coalition in 1991; now there is none except for British Prime Minister Tony  Blair, whose own people are opposed. 
  
  Opposition to US plans
  France, Russia and China had opposed US-UK policies for expansion of no-fly  zones over Iraq and other measures, and now want action though the UN. Iraq is Russia's old  ally and owes it $8 billion. Russia  has to worry also about a backlash among its large Muslim population. "Any  attack would only be justified if a mandate was approved by the UN Security  Council," President Jacques Chirac of France said after a recent meeting  with Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder of Germany. "That is the position  of Germany  and France."  In his election speeches, Schroeder has clearly expressed opposition to US  plans to attack Iraq.  It is the position of most other countries. 
  
  Afraid that a new Security Council resolution would be vetoed by Russia or China, US  officials claim that in view of Saddam's defiance of past UN mandates -  including expulsion of UN weapons inspectors in 1998 - no further UN action is  necessary. Saddam did expel UN weapons inspectors, but to claim that there is  already a UN mandate for an invasion is untenable. According to the new Bush  doctrine, an attack would be "pre-emptive self-defense". But this  doctrine could be used to justify military adventurism from Chechnya to Palestine, or to bomb a  schoolboy studying nuclear physics in Rameshwaram. 
  
  There is not even a casus belli. Unlike 1990-91, there is no clear-cut  aggression. The US  administration has failed to establish any link between Iraq and the  September 11 attacks. Blair had promised proof but has not yet delivered. In  fact, the fanatics who attacked America  came from Saudi Arabia  and Egypt,  staunch US  allies. No US  bombs have fallen on these American protectorates. Instead, more than 5,000  civilians have been bombed to death in stricken Afghanistan. 
  
  There is no persuasive evidence that Iraq has rebuilt weapons facilities  dismantled after the 1991 war. Even if Iraq has small stockpiles of lethal  chemical and biological weapons and some Scud missiles, Saddam will use them  only if attacked. Even obedient weapons inspector Richard Butler told the US  Senate that there was no evidence that Iraq had passed weapons technology  to non-Iraqi terrorist groups. Scott Ritter, another former UN weapons  inspector in Iraq,  has said that the US  has not produced enough hard evidence to justify an attack. Rolf Ekeus, the  Swedish arms inspector from 1991 to 1997, accused the US last month  of manipulating the UN mission for its own ends. The US was more keen on tracking  Saddam's whereabouts, which "could be of interest if one were to target  him personally". 
  
  Saudi Arabia  was misled in 1991 by doctored evidence of Saddam's intentions. The stationing  of US troops on sacred Arabian soil after the war is resented by Arabs and  Muslims all over the world. They also oppose oppressive pro-US Arab regimes and  their siphoning off of oil wealth. After September 11, most Muslims see the  Arab-Israel conflict and US plans to attack Iraq as part of Crusade versus  Jihad. In Saudi Arabia,  the union of corrupt princes and fanatical Wahhabis is already under strain.  The Shah of Iran had a very powerful military machine but was forced to flee  the aroused masses. Reports now emanating from the US say that Saudi Arabia  should be treated as a US  enemy because it supports jihadis all over the world. If necessary, its oil  fields could be occupied. Anyway, after Saddam's replacement with a  "democratic regime", Iraqi oil will be available as a replacement. 
  
  The morning after: Post-Saddam   Iraq
  What of the post-Saddam scenario? Who will run Iraq? In spite of Western belief,  Saddam remains popular with the masses, who blame the embargo and frequent  bombings for their misery. Given Iraq's 40-year history of  repression, it is highly likely that blood will flow with the settling of old scores.  And who would stop the Iraqi people turning against the occupying Americans? 
  
  What if a Shi'ite state based in Basra  declared independence with covert support from Iran? North Iraqi Kurds, almost  autonomous since 1991, could also declare independence, leaving a  Sunni-dominated center. This could tempt Turkey to move into Mosul and Kirkuk. To keep  post-Saddam Iraq  united would need security forces of around 75,000, costing about $15 billion,  for a year or two, and a force of more than 5,000 for many years after if the  reconstruction effort is to succeed. But would the result be any different than  in Afghanistan?  
  
  Most analysts scratch their heads, only to conclude that US options make little  strategic sense. They feel that the leaking of "attack plans" are  only psychological warfare. Their preferred option is to continue the existing  policy of containment, combined with attempts to destabilize the Iraqi regime.  A US  attack could dangerously destabilize the region, harm the global economy, and  infuriate Arab and Muslim masses. Former British chief of staff Field Marshal  Lord Bramall, warned in a letter to the Times that an invasion would pour  "petrol rather than water" on the flames and provide al-Qaeda with  more recruits. He quoted a predecessor who during the 1956 Suez crisis said: "Of course we can get  to Cairo, but  what I want to know is what the bloody hell we do when we get there?" 
  
  The whole thing is only accentuating the image of the "Ugly  American". A respected non-partisan US think tank, the Council on  Foreign Relations, said in a recent report to the White House, "Around the  world, from western Europe to the Far East,  many see the United States  as arrogant, hypocritical, self-absorbed, self-indulgent, and contemptuous of  others." 
  
  Conclusion: Raging bull
  With its vast military-industrial complex, the US needs constant conflict, ie,  wars or near wars, to justify its staggering expenditure. The only superpower,  with the most destructive power at its command in history, has pretensions to  be an imperial power without the grace or obligations that go with it. After  the stunning events of September 11, it is behaving like a raging bull, as if  its manhood had been castrated. But the enemy al-Qaeda, with its tentacles  around the world, remains free and hidden. Attacking Iraq would give the impression that  the flagging "war on terror" is going somewhere. As Bush found in Afghanistan,  whacking foreigners is popular with many Americans and wins votes. Iraq and  hapless Iraqis would fit and foot the bill. Moreover, an attack would distract  attention from financial scandals which threaten to enmesh both president and  vice president. To many, it seems that the US administration represents but  narrow corporate interests, and already, in this respect, the impending war  seems to be going rather well. 
  
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