Are We
on the Eve of War?
Is
the US Leading Saudi Arabia Down the Kuwaiti
Invasion Road?
By JC Collins
February 11, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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"POM"
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For the first
time in a long time I feel concerned and worried
about the prospect of war. The reaction of Saudi
Arabia to the Russian intervention in Syria has
always been the wild card in the shifting
geopolitical power base in the Middle East. Turkey
and Israel, along with Saudi Arabia are the three
countries with the most to lose because of a strong
alliance between Syria, Iran, Hezbollah, and Russia.
These three traditional American allies have been
accustomed to Western support in regards to their
own specific regional goals and ambitions. This
support has been so staunch and counterproductive to
regional stability that the growing comfort and
alliance between Iran and the US should be both
confusing and worrisome to Saudi Arabia and Turkey.
On the one hand the US is making agreements with
Iran and lifting sanction while on the other hand it
is indirectly supporting Saudi Arabia’s and Turkey’s
proxy war against Syria. A war which Iran, along
with the support of Russia and Hezbollah, are
resisting and countering with massive aerial and
ground support.
This contradiction is suggestive of another and more
complex strategy which may be unfolding in the
Middle East. A strategy which is beginning to look
familiar.
Back in 1990
when Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait the state of the
Iraqi dictator’s mind was both paranoid and
desperate. The once American supported leader at
some point felt he would have the blessings of the
US administration in his regional adventures. The
controversy surrounding US Ambassador April
Glaspie’s comments to Saddam regarding having no
interest in Iraq’s border dispute with Kuwait, and
her later vindication by the release of a memo, is
somewhat irrelevant as Saddam obviously felt the
support was there. Whether through direct and
straightforward communication or through trickery.
Once Iraq
invaded Kuwait the Western press mobilized and a
massive propaganda campaign against Saddam Hussein
commenced. The once American ally was isolated on
the world stage and suffered one of the worst
military defeats in the history of warfare.
The
interesting parallels between 1990 Iraq and 2016
Saudi Arabia are unlikely to be coincidental. Both
have militaries which were built with American
equipment and support. Both were used by American
interests to counter Iranian regional ambitions.
Both supported the sale of their domestically
produced crude exports in US dollars.
In support of
this conclusion we find the recent statement of
Iranian Armed Forces’ Chief of Staff Major General
Hassan Firouzabadi, who stated:
“US
Defense Secretary [Ashton Carter] is supporting
and provoking the House of Saud to march to the
war [in Syria]. This is an indication that he is
at a loss. It also proves beyond any doubt that
they have failed.”
Are
we to assume that the US strategy in the Middle East
is at a standstill?
I seriously doubt that and America’s agreements with
Iran would support something else being afoot.
America may be misleading Saudi Arabia down the same
road as it led Saddam Hussein in the buildup to the
Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990. Except this time
the aerial bombardment will come from Russian forces
and the mop up crew will consist of Iranian and
Hezbollah forces.
Further
support for this conclusion comes from the recent
comments of John Kerry where he said “what do
you want me to do, go to war with the Russians?”
Why is there
this disconnect and contradictory approach within
the American government? I seriously doubt that it
is caused by opposing factions within the US
establishment. A potential war of this magnitude
will not be left to the whims of domestic bantering
and browbeating.
Saudi Arabia and Turkey are both pushed into a
corner over the shifting power base in the Middle
East. The paranoia
and desperation, like Saddam in 1990, could very
well cause both countries to commit to the very act
of aggression which will lead to their ultimate
demise and removal from a position of influence
within the region.
Are we on the
verge of another war?
Perhaps. But
I still content that it will be a regional war only
and that the objective of that war will be the
removal of once American allies who have been funded
and provided with the equipment which will now have
to be destroyed and removed from the region.
In the post
The Coming Islamic Revolution in Saudi Arabia I
wrote the following:
“There is a growing consensus that there may be
a division within the Saud family itself. This
is the one thing that could very well finally
topple the monarchy. The House of Saud could be
tearing itself apart with opposing strategies.”
“One strategy is based on maintaining
socioeconomic and military control over the
country, and working with other nations, such as
China, on developing business contracts which
are not based on crude, but on other sources of
revenue which can be gained from alternative
energy sources, such as nuclear.”
“The other
strategy involves a conclusion where the Shiite
majority which is building up around Saudi
Arabia will eventually incite revolution within
the country as the conflict in Yemen spreads
further across the border, and deeper regional
integration between the Shiite players takes
place.”
It
is plausible that an overthrow of the House of Saud
would benefit the American strategy against China.
The divisions within Saudi Arabia make it ripe for
such a strategy explained above. Especially if
there is a faction of the House of Saud which would
be willing to take control of what remains and fit
within a larger Middle Eastern regional alliance.
A negotiation
with China regarding crude sales in renminbi as
discussed in the post
The Petro-Renminbi Emerges, could very well be
the macro-geopolitical and macro-socioeconomic
strategy which is unfolding here. Such an outcome
would benefit both China and Russia, while also
maintaining a check on Iranian regional ambitions.
To
think that the US would enter into a major war
against Russia over Saudi Arabia is fraught with
mindlessness and madness.
The more probable strategy is the overthrow of the
House of Saud, or at least a complete restructuring
of the countries place within the Middle East.
Will Saudi
Arabia take the bait and invade Syria? I think we
may know that answer sooner rather than later.
Philosophyofmetrics.com was created by JC Collins on
New Years Eve, 2013, as a gift to himself on his
40th birthday. It is an independent endeavor meant
to attract other philosophically and abstractly
inclined individuals to define the current state of
mans awareness and to seek out alternative
methodologies by which humanity can seek itself in
the endless tomorrows before us. |