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War and Terror: Chris Floyd: 'Master class' Posted on Friday, July 09 @ 21:35:16 UTC
Topic: War Analysis
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By Chris Floyd, Moscow Times
It's about oil. It's about Israel. It's about democracy. It's about terrorism. It's about global dominance. It's about Bush family dynamics. It's about national security. It's about religion.
Countless theories have been offered to explain the origins of George W. Bush's invasion of Iraq. Some are clearly specious, others have more merit, but all are speculative to some degree. The ultimate truth will doubtless prove elusive. "Reality has always had too many heads," as Bob Dylan wisely reminds us. However, by sticking solely to clearly established, noncontroversial facts, we can perhaps stake out a small patch of clear ground in the sulfurous fog of war. For the facts show that whatever else the Iraqi adventure may be about, at least one thing is certain beyond dispute: It's about money.
For months here, we've outlined various aspects of the Bush Regime's unprecedented war profiteering, following the dripping trail of blood money from the ripped-up bodies of Iraqi children and the disemboweled corpses of U.S. soldiers to the silk pockets of Bush, Dick Cheney and their closest associates.
While such grubby work is not as glamorous as high-flown theoretical pondering on the meaning of it all (something of which we've certainly done our share, as well), it is perhaps the best way to thread Bush's Babylonian labyrinth of death and deceit.
Last week saw a flurry of stories (largely ignored, naturally) indicating that the pervasive corruption of America's colonial enterprise has risen to new heights. Reports by scrupulously nonpartisan institutions, including Christian Aid and the General Accounting Office, the independent investigative arm of the U.S. Congress, revealed that in the final weeks of its "formal" occupation of Iraq -- before handing over nominal control of the client state to CIA-backed terrorist leader and ex-Baathist enforcer Iyad Allawi -- the Bush Regime plunged into an orgy of graft that stripped Iraq's treasury bare. Most of this loot was divvied up in no-bid contracts to Regime lardbuckets like Halliburton -- but up to $3 billion of it simply "disappeared" into pockets yet unknown, The Baltimore Sun reports.
Like their Baathist predecessors, the Bushist overlords were given control of the UN-established Development Fund, which was supposed to guarantee that Iraq's oil revenues were spent on the needs of the Iraqi people. But like Saddam Hussein, Bush instead used the fund as a barrel of personal pork to reward cronies and buy local political support with bribes. By the time Bush viceroy Paul Bremer made his hugger-mugger handover of "sovereignty" to CIA man Allawi, there was less than $1 billion left in the $20 billion fund -- with more than $6 billion of this siphoned off in just the last two months of direct U.S. rule, The Guardian reports.
Where did it all go? Half went to "Iraqi ministries" staffed with local frontmen like Allawi and his cousin, convicted fraudster and intelligence forger Ahmad Chalabi, and with Bush partisans from back home, many of them young right-wing zealots with no administrative experience whatsoever. Another chunk went to military units for use in rebuilding buildings they'd blasted down, paying compensation to the families of innocent people they'd killed, and buying intelligence and informants to help meet Bushist quotas for filling the torturous interrogation rooms in Abu Ghraib and its gulag satellites -- where the Red Cross says up to 90 percent of all the captives were innocent. Money well spent, obviously.
The rest of the fund was given to Halliburton and friends for "reconstruction" -- usually in noncompetitive contracts doled out by Bremer and his handpicked "Iraqi Governing Council" without any independent review, the GAO reports. Almost all of the $20 billion fund was oil revenue -- a nationalized resource belonging solely to the Iraqi people. And except for some chump change left behind for the CIA terrorist, it's all gone now.
But the scam gets even sweeter. During the 14 months of direct rule, Bush -- an old oilman -- somehow failed to have the Iraqi oil under his charge properly metered. That means there was simply no way on Earth to keep legitimate accounts on the oil revenue that was supposed to go into the Development Fund. Trying to make some sense of these well-cooked books, Christian Aid and international auditors compared the best production and pricing figures available from oil industry experts -- and found a discrepancy of between $1.8 billion and $3 billion from the Bushists' claims of total oil revenues given to the fund.
We told you it was sweet: You get control of Iraq's oil money and dish it out to your cronies and collaborators until it's all gone -- while setting aside a few secret billions for yourself that no one can ever trace. It's the same operation that Hussein ran. He's accused of skimming $4.4 billion from the Development Fund while he was in power -- but that took him years. Bush almost matched him in just 14 months. As the Iraqis say of the occupation: "The pupil has gone; the master has arrived."
Indeed. Halliburton, under Cheney, once did a paltry $23 million in backdoor business with Hussein; now, cutting out the middleman (and more than 10,000 innocent lives, as well), the company has $18 billion in Iraqi war contracts, thanks to its White House rainmakers. And no doubt that $3 billion unmetered skim will be bankrolling some fancy Houston mansions and choice Texas scrub brush in the years to come.
The question of war -- its causes and consequences -- is always a multi-headed hydra, defeating easy analysis. But for the thieves of Baghdad, one simple fact holds true: Crime pays.
Annotations
Cold Irons Bound Bob Dylan, Time Out of Mind, Sept. 30, 1997
$19 Billion in Iraq Oil Revenue Disappears; US Accused of Depleting Fund Baltimore Sun, July 3, 2004
Fuelling Suspicion: the Coalition and Iraq's Oil Billions Christian Aid, July 7, 2004
New Halliburton Waste Alleged MSNBC, July 1, 2004
US Sloppily Managed Iraq Oil Money Reuters, June 28, 2004
Pentagon Deputy Used Probe to Push Contracts For Friends Los Angeles Times, July 7, 2004
Iraq Gets Fraction of US Aid Billions The Guardian, July 5, 2004
Saddam Could Call CIA in His Defense Inter Press Service, July 3, 2004
Dictator-in-Waiting? Newsweek, June 30, 2004
City Awash With Tales of Cronyism and Corruption The Independent, June 30, 2004
White House Disclosures Lead to Halliburton Progressive Populist, Nov. 1, 2003 issue
The Politics of Deceit in the House of Bush Kevin Phillips interview, Buzzflash.com, Jan. 4, 2004
The Barreling Bushes Los Angeles Times, Jan. 11, 2004
Consultant On Iraq Contracts Employed President's Brother Financial Times, Nov. 27, 2003
Iraqgate: Confession and Coverup Consortiumnews.com, May/June 1995
Iraqgate Columbia Journalism Review, March/April 1993
© Copyright 2004, The Moscow Times.
Reprinted from The Moscow Times:
www.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2004/07/09/120.html
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