Cheney’s “peace” trip to
Middle East prepares new wars

By David Walsh
21 March 2008
US Vice
President Dick Cheney, during a trip to the Middle East
aimed at consolidating Washington’s position in its
ongoing wars of aggression and preparing new ones, gave
vent Wednesday to his utter contempt for the will of the
American people.
In the
course of an extended interview with Cheney conducted in
Oman, Martha Raddatz of ABC News noted, speaking of the
Iraq war, “Two-thirds of Americans say it’s not worth
fighting, and they’re looking at the value gain versus
the cost in American lives, certainly, and Iraqi lives.”
The
vice president replied, “So?”
Raddatz
continued, “So—you don’t care what the American people
think?” Cheney responded, “No, I think you cannot be
blown off course by the fluctuations in the public
opinion polls.”
These
opinion polls have indicated massive opposition to the
war within the US population, without significant
fluctuation, for the past three years. The Republican
Party lost control of Congress in 2006 largely because
of this opposition. Cheney, an authoritarian politician,
brushes all that aside.
Raddatz
also noted that she had spoken with US troops Tuesday at
the Balad air base in Iraq during a reception for
Cheney. She explained that she had “asked people who
they were supporting for president. Several said Barack
Obama. I said, but he wants to get out of Iraq right
away. And they said, that’s okay with me. These are the
troops that you addressed yesterday themselves.”
Cheney
responded, “What’s the question?”
“Any
reaction to that?” “No.”
Raddatz
went on, “It doesn’t bother you that some of the troops
themselves want to get out of there?” To which Cheney
replied, “They’re a broad cross section of America. I
think they’ve overwhelmingly supported the mission.
Every single one of them is a volunteer.”
Cheney’s remarks reveal the outlook of an antidemocratic
and out of control regime. The Bush administration feels
free to flout public opinion, and boast about it,
counting on the complicity of the Democrats in Congress,
who will do nothing to stop the war.
The
vice president’s current visit to the Middle East,
according to a Washington Post columnist,
involves “bending people to his will” on a number of
critical questions, including an Iraqi oil law that
would benefit the petroleum giants and, most
importantly, drumming up support for a US attack on
Iran.
The
10-day tour of the region includes scheduled stops in
Oman, Saudi Arabia, Israel, the Occupied Territories and
Turkey. In addition, the vice president has made
surprise visits to Iraq and Afghanistan.
As
befits an individual identified with covert operations
and secret government, Cheney’s visit to the volatile
region has involved a number of cloak and dagger
maneuvers. The first announced stop on the vice
president’s excursion was the Sultanate of Oman.
However, Sunday night, his airplane, Air Force Two,
parked on a runway in London and Cheney transferred to a
C-17 for the remainder of a surprise trip to Baghdad.
In
Baghdad, before encountering officials of Iraq’s
“sovereign” national government, Cheney met with the
real rulers of the country, US Ambassador Ryan Crocker
and Gen. David Petraeus. At a “press availability” later
on Monday, accompanied by Crocker and Petraeus, Cheney
praised the US military’s surge as “a remarkable
success,” and speaking of the five years of the war,
declared, “I think it’s been a difficult, challenging,
but nonetheless successful endeavor ... we’ve come a
long way in five years, and it’s been well worth the
effort.”
Cheney
spent the rest of Monday strong-arming Iraqi officials
on a number of issues, including the matter of the oil
law and also on legislation setting a timeframe for
provincial elections.
The
passage of an oil law that would open Iraq to American
and other foreign oil companies has been one of the key
aims of the US occupation and a principal “benchmark”
set by the Bush administration and both parties in
Congress for the government of Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki. Iraq’s sectarian elites are bitterly divided
over how the oil revenues are to be shared.
The
bill’s principal aim is to end the central government’s
monopoly on the development of oilfields and eliminate
existing contracts with Russian, Chinese and European
oil companies, clearing the way for American and
“allied” companies. The draft of the legislation was
drawn up under US supervision.
When
asked about the issue by ABC News’s Raddatz March 19,
Cheney readily acknowledged its importance. “Hydrocarbon
law ... is one that needs to be addressed. They’ve got a
lot of work to do on that. That’s an issue I discussed
with virtually all of the Iraqis that I talked to, in
terms of the importance of getting that done.”
Speaking Tuesday to some 3,000 US troops at the Balad
air base, 45 miles north of Baghdad, Cheney made a
series of bellicose and threatening statements. He told
his captive audience, “We have no intention of
abandoning our friends or allowing this country ... to
become a staging ground for further attacks against
Americans.” Of course Iraq has never been a staging
ground for any attacks on Americans, but Cheney least of
all permits facts to get in his way.
AFP
noted that Cheney’s Iraqi visit “has been marked by a
series of bomb attacks. The deadliest was in the central
city of Karbala where a bombing near the Shiite shrine
of Imam Hussein killed at least 52 people and wounded
75. The Balad air base [where Cheney stayed the night]
also reverberated overnight with US military shelling of
suspected insurgent hideouts.”
While
in Baghdad, the US vice president, according to the
McClatchy News Service, spent the day “zigzagging
through barricades and checkpoints to get to meetings in
and out of the heavily guarded Green Zone.” While Cheney
pronounced favorably on the “phenomenal” and “dramatic”
security improvements since his last visit in May 2007,
“His own motorcade, escorted by Humvees manned by troops
with machine guns, never ventured farther than a mile
outside the Green Zone.”
Before
leaving for Oman on Tuesday, Cheney flew to Arbil,
capital of Iraq’s Kurdish region, and met with Kurdish
leader Masoud Barzani. Cheney applied renewed pressure
on Barzani to see that the oil legislation was passed.
Cheney
also came away from secret discussions with Shiite,
Sunni and Kurdish leaders with general agreement on a
treaty ensuring an American occupation of Iraq “that
will stretch beyond the Bush presidency” (Associated
Press). A key item of the backroom talks “was about
crafting a long-term agreement between the US and Iraq,
plus a narrower deal to define the legal basis for
continued US troop presence.” The deal would take the
place of the UN Security Council resolution that expires
in December. “Administration officials say they probably
will not seek Senate approval of the plan.”
The
vice president made another surprise stop Thursday, in
war-torn Afghanistan. The visit, commented the Wall
Street Journal, “reflects the Bush administration’s
growing worries over the international effort” in that
country. Cheney, just as he had in Iraq, made a number
of menacing and delusional statements about the
situation. At a joint press conference with Afghan
President Hamid Karzai, the American puppet head of
state, the US vice president declared, “During the last
six years, the people of Afghanistan have made a bold
and confident journey, throwing off the burden of
tyranny, winning your freedom and reclaiming your
future.”
Cheney
reiterated the Bush administration’s intention to push
the European powers to commit more troops to the brutal
conflict at next month’s NATO summit in Bucharest,
Rumania.
Recent
news reports indicate the growing strength of the
insurgency in Afghanistan; anti-government forces
securely control at least 10 percent of the country,
with a surge expected in the warmer weather this spring.
Warlordism, the drug trade and abject poverty and misery
afflict the Central Asian nation, after six-and-a-half
years of US and allied occupation.
The
media reported Thursday, the day of the American vice
president’s visit, that US-led troops had killed three
men, two children and a woman in a raid on the Afghan
village of Muqibel in the southeastern part of the
country. The victims were all civilians. “The children,
both boys no older than 10, had bullet wounds to the
head and chest,” according to the Gulf Daily News.
Angry crowds of villagers gathered and chanted, “We will
join the jihad” and “Death to Bush.”
War with Iran
Central
to Cheney’s tour is a campaign to secure support for a
US-led military assault on Iran.
At the
time of the forced resignation last week of Admiral
William Fallon, chief military commander in the Middle
East, over his disagreement with the administration’s
Iran policy, commentators already noted the significance
of Cheney’s upcoming visit to the region.
A US
News & World Report blog March 11, devoted to “signs
the US may be headed for war in Iran,” observed that the
vice president would be visiting Oman, “a key military
ally and logistics hub for military operations in the
Persian Gulf.... Cheney is also going to Saudi Arabia,
whose support would be sought before any military
action, given its ability to increase oil supplies if
Iran’s oil is cut off.”
The
same article also took note of Cheney’s “high-profile”
visit to the Middle East in March 2002, which officials
at the time claimed “was about diplomacy toward Iraq and
not war, which began a year later.”
In his
interview with Cheney in Oman, ABC’s Raddatz remarked,
“You’ve certainly ratcheted up the rhetoric about Iran,”
to which Cheney responded, “I’ve been pretty consistent
over time about Iran.” The television correspondent then
asked the vice president, “Can you foresee any point
where military action would be taken? I ask you this
because when you come over here, people in the region
start thinking you’re over here to plan some sort of
military action.” Cheney replied, candidly, “Well, I
suppose that’s because of my past history.”
He
added, “I think the important thing to keep in mind is
the objective that we share with many of our friends in
the region, and that is that a nuclear-armed Iran would
be very destabilizing for the entire area.”
In the
ABC interview, Cheney essentially dismissed the findings
of the US government’s National Intelligence Estimate,
which concluded that Iran had ended its nuclear weapons
program in 2003. The vice president indicated that “we
don’t know whether or not they’ve restarted” the
weaponization process.
In a
classic case of “protesting too much,” a Cheney aide
stressed Thursday in Washington that the vice
president’s tour “was not intended to set the stage for
military action against Iran” (AFP). Every indicator
suggests otherwise. The talks in Oman in particular,
according to this very same individual, were “expected
to focus on US efforts to contain Iran’s influence and
curb its nuclear program.”
The
unnamed aide revealed that Iran “has got to be very
high” on the agenda for the talks. “The Omanis, like a
lot of other people, are concerned by the escalating
tensions between the rest of the world community and
Iran, by some of Iran’s activities, particularly in the
nuclear field, but outside its borders as well,” the
official said.
Even
ahead of his trip, Cheney was “ratcheting up the
rhetoric” against the Iranian regime. In a March 11
speech to the right-wing Heritage Foundation, the vice
president warned that Iran might be a growing threat to
Israel in the Gaza Strip. “Tehran may increasingly be
turning its sights to inflaming the situation in the
Gaza Strip,” the vice president claimed. “In Gaza,
crude, home-made weapons meant to terrorize Israeli
civilians are being augmented by more advanced,
longer-range weapons that are clearly smuggled in from
the outside.”
The
debacle in Iraq and Afghanistan, which has laid waste to
the two countries and cost more than a million lives,
has done nothing to lessen the belligerence of the
faction of the US ruling elite for which Cheney speaks.
On the contrary, the setbacks have increased its
desperation and rapacity. There are sharp divisions over
policy toward the Middle East, but all elements of the
American establishment begin from the premise that the
US must have unrestricted dominance over oil and energy
supplies.
Under
conditions of the threatened “unwinding” of the US and
global financial system (Cheney, like Bush, calls it “a
rough patch,” and the operation of “the normal cycle in
a private sector economy”), the American elite will be
driven more than ever to take the most extreme measures.
Cheney’s tour, with its combination of bullying and
bribery, will continue on to Saudi Arabia, Israel and
Turkey.
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