Bush Didn't Bungle Iraq, You Fools
The Mission Was Indeed Accomplished
By Greg Palast
03/20/06 "The
Guardian" -- -- Get off it. All the carping,
belly-aching and complaining about George Bush's incompetence in
Iraq, from both the Left and now the Right, is just dead wrong.
On the third anniversary of the tanks rolling over Iraq's
border, most of the 59 million Homer Simpsons who voted for Bush
are beginning to doubt if his mission was accomplished.
But don't kid yourself -- Bush and his co-conspirator, Dick
Cheney, accomplished exactly what they set out to do. In case
you've forgotten what their real mission was, let me remind you
of White House spokesman Ari Fleisher's original announcement,
three years ago, launching of what he called,
"
Operation
Iraqi
Liberation."
O.I.L. How droll of them, how cute. Then, Karl Rove made the
giggling boys in the White House change it to "OIF" -- Operation
Iraqi Freedom. But the 101st Airborne wasn't sent to Basra to
get its hands on Iraq's OIF.
"It's about oil," Robert Ebel told me. Who is Ebel? Formerly the
CIA's top oil analyst, he was sent by the Pentagon, about a
month before the invasion, to a secret confab in London with
Saddam's former oil minister to finalize the plans for
"liberating" Iraq's oil industry. In London, Bush's emissary
Ebel also instructed Ibrahim Bahr al-Ulum, the man the Pentagon
would choose as post-OIF oil minister for Iraq, on the correct
method of disposing Iraq's crude.
And what did the USA want Iraq to do with Iraq's oil? The answer
will surprise many of you: and it is uglier, more twisted,
devilish and devious than anything imagined by the most
conspiracy-addicted blogger. The answer can be found in a
323-page plan for Iraq's oil secretly drafted by the State
Department. Our team got a hold of a copy; how, doesn't matter.
The key thing is what's inside this thick Bush diktat: a
directive to Iraqis to maintain a state oil company that will
"enhance its relationship with OPEC."
Enhance its relationship with OPEC??? How strange: the
government of the United States ordering Iraq to support the
very OPEC oil cartel which is strangling our nation with
outrageously high prices for crude.
Specifically, the system ordered up by the Bush cabal would keep
a lid on Iraq's oil production -- limiting Iraq's oil pumping to
the tight quota set by Saudi Arabia and the OPEC cartel.
There you have it. Yes, Bush went in for the oil -- not to get
more of Iraq's oil, but to prevent Iraq producing too much of
it.
You must keep in mind who paid for George's ranch and Dick's
bunker: Big Oil. And Big Oil -- and their buck-buddies, the
Saudis -- don't make money from pumping more oil, but from
pumping less of it. The lower the supply, the higher the price.
It's Economics 101. The oil industry is run by a cartel, OPEC,
and what economists call an "oligopoly" -- a tiny handful of
operators who make more money when there's less oil, not more of
it. So, every time the "insurgents" blow up a pipeline in Basra,
every time Mad Mahmoud in Tehran threatens to cut supply, the
price of oil leaps. And Dick and George just love it.
Dick and George didn't want more oil from Iraq, they wanted
less. I know some of you, no matter what I write, insist that
our President and his Veep are on the hunt for more crude so you
can cheaply fill your family Hummer; that somehow, these two
oil-patch babies are concerned that the price of gas in the USA
is bumping up to $3 a gallon.
Not so, gentle souls. Three bucks a gallon in the States (and a
quid a litre in Britain) means colossal profits for Big Oil, and
that makes Dick's ticker go pitty-pat with joy. The top oily-gopolists,
the five largest oil companies, pulled in $113 billion in profit
in 2005 -- compared to a piddly $34 billion in 2002 before
Operation Iraqi Liberation. In other words, it's been a good war
for Big Oil.
As per Plan Bush, Bahr Al-Ulum became Iraq's occupation oil
minister; the conquered nation "enhanced its relationship with
OPEC;" and the price of oil, from Clinton peace-time to Bush
war-time, shot up 317%.
In other words, on the third anniversary of invasion, we can say
the attack and occupation is, indeed, a Mission Accomplished.
However, it wasn't America's mission, nor the Iraqis'. It was a
Mission Accomplished for OPEC and Big Oil.
On June 6, Penguin Dutton will release Greg Palast's new
book, Armed Madhouse: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the
Class War. View his investigative reports for Harper's Magazine
and BBC television's Newsnight at www.GregPalast.com.