U.S. BALKS AT IRAQI INVASION - GLOBAL
ECONOMIC OPPOSITION SUCCEEDING
Risks of A Massive Global Conflict
Increase with Each New Successful
Economic Effort to
Slow the Empire's Expansion
by Michael C. Ruppert
[© Copyright,
2002, From The Wilderness Publications, www.fromthewilderness.com.
All rights reserved.
May be copied, distributed or posted on the Internet for non-profit purposes
only.]
Dec. 19 2002, 1400 PST, (FTW) - Over the last three months the world has successfully demonstrated that
it can delay and obstruct U.S. plans to occupy the
oil fields of Iraq and Saudi Arabia. This is both good
news and bad news. Today's UN developments regarding
Iraq's statement on weapons of mass destruction have
served to increase the stakes over U.S. plans to occupy
that country. The Empire's feet of clay are rooted
in monumental budget deficits, trade deficits, fraudulent
financial markets, cheap oil and rigged gold prices.
It is on these fronts that the battle for Iraq is now
being fought.
The fact that the planned invasion of Iraq did not
occur as was originally planned in late September in
no way diminishes the accuracy of FTW's
prediction that it was planned for that time. In our
lead essay
for the November issue of FTW -"Wheels
Come Off U.S. War Plans for Iraq" - we explained
very clearly that resistance
on a number of economic and political fronts around
the world was having an impact on the Empire's agenda.
This is a gratifying and positive development and a
sign that there are tactics that are being successfully
used to delay United States imperial aggression in
violation of international law, basic American values,
human rights and common sense.
We believe that a clear example of the backstage economic "negotiations" has
been a recent bust-out of world gold prices coupled
with near panic buying on some Asian markets as reported
today by Reuters. And with gold threatening $350 an
ounce (a more than 25% increase this year) U.S. financial
powerhouses like J.P. Morgan Chase and Citigroup, which
have for decades engaged in manipulation of gold prices,
are seriously threatened. Their derivatives bubbles
($40 trillion in the case of Morgan alone) could pop
as a result of demands for physical gold reconciliation
with paper gold accounts and the U.S. economy could
be devastated as a result.
Another case in point is the ongoing Venezuelan crisis,
artificially manipulated by the U.S. government which
has resulted in what may be unjustified fears of oil
price spikes as we enter what may be the worst winter
in a decade. As we have previously reported, since
World War II, oil price spikes invariably lead to recession
and the U.S. economy is teetering at that point now.
Recession may, in fact, be too mild a word. The market
fundamentals leading to the economic warning we issued
last July, just before the Dow Jones fell off a cliff,
remain unchanged and the savviest world leaders understand
the basic vulnerabilities in the U.S. economy.
Just today, December 19, 2002, as UN Chief Weapons
Inspector Hans Blix reported negatively to the UN Security
Council on Iraqi compliance, we see continued evidence
that behind-the-scenes diplomatic and economic pressures
are continuing to slow down U.S. efforts to control
the second largest oil reserves on the planet. FTW agrees strongly with former UN weapons inspector Scott
Ritter who spoke recently in San Francisco and with
U.C. Berkeley professor and author Peter Dale Scott
that a U.S. invasion of Iraq will - in addition to
Iraq's 11% - see a near-simultaneous occupation of
key oil fields in Saudi Arabia holding another 25%
of all the oil reserves on the planet. Recent revelations
that anticipated Caspian Basin reserves have been wildly
overestimated only intensify Peak Oil issues for every
nation and increase the tensions over what happens
in Iraq. Each industrialized nation knows that unless
it secures a piece of the Middle East oil pie its survivability
in coming oil crises is in question. There are no more
significant oil deposits left to find, especially where
the Empire has not already marked them with its scent.
Today, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer indicated
that there would be no immediate move to invade Iraq
or toward unilateral action on the part of the U.S.
in spite of statements by U.S. Ambassador to the UN
John Negroponte that Iraq was in material breach of
UN resolution 1441. It now appears that no additional
action will be taken in the Security Council until
late January. That would indicate that the soonest
that a U.S. invasion could occur would be sometime
in February. That would also come perilously close
to making it a certainty that U.S. military operations
in the region could be continuing as temperatures rise
to near-summer levels in the late spring.
These delays are a mixed blessing. While providing
evidence that there are strategies that can derail
the unilateral plans of the American "hyperpower" and
giving hope to those who are looking for performance
and result-oriented strategies, the inherent dangers
involved in an Iraqi invasion increase with each new
delay. Throughout the region - as oil supply issues
emerge dominant - smaller coalitions are forming to
resist U.S. military plans and political and economic
alliances shift as the rest of the world looks for
alternatives to abject surrender to Imperial occupation.
Just today Reuters announced that the U.S. intends
to send an additional 50,000 troops to the region.
Each additional delay only increases the likelihood
that when it does move the U.S. will employ massive
force - possibly even tactical nuclear weapons - resulting
in large numbers of civilian casualties.
Had the invasion occurred last September, as originally
planned, it would likely have resulted in a quick occupation
of Iraq because the rest of the world and various interests
in the Middle East had not had time to organize military,
economic and political resistance. Each new delay,
while not preventing the invasion, only increases the
certainty that the conflict will be bloody, prolonged,
and will likely spread throughout the region - if not
the entire planet. Sadly, it appears as though the
Bush War Cabinet has anticipated these developments
and is spoiling for a fight that it recognizes might
unleash the Horsemen of the Apocalypse. This is destructive
madness of the highest order.
At home, both popular and institutional resistance
to mass smallpox vaccinations and the administration's
heavy handedness with Homeland Security, Total Information
Awareness and a glacially powerful erosion of civil
liberties is also not going unnoticed by the global
community. As I have predicted since January of 2001,
this administration is reacting to each new challenge
with the only set of coping tools it possesses: intimidation,
deception, coercion and brutality. And these responses
are provoking real resistance leaders to find ways
to fight the Empire in ways that hurt it, by voting
with their pocketbooks and withdrawing the consumer
support that keeps the Imperial engine running. I wonder
how long it will be before significant portions of
the population start refusing to pay their taxes. That
will be a key signal that the American people are finally
psychologically prepared to do something that will
make a difference.
At that point, perhaps, the American people will have
matured beyond the infantile belief that these problems
can be solved from the comfort of an armchair or a
pleasant weekend demonstration that goes totally ignored
by the mainstream press. There is nothing at stake
except tomorrow.
Avec nous, le déluge.
Michael C. Ruppert
Publisher/Editor
From The Wilderness
http://www.fromthewilderness.com