http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article14810.htm
US Army Contemplates Redrawing Middle East Map to
Stave-off Looming Global Meltdown

By Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed

09/02/06 "Dissidentvoice" In a little-noted article
printed in early August in the Armed Forces Journal, a
monthly magazine for officers and leaders in the
United States military community, early retired Major
Ralph Peters sets out the latest ideas in current US
strategic thinking. And they are extremely disturbing.

Ethnically Cleansing the Entire Middle East

Maj. Peters, formerly assigned to the Office of the
Deputy Chief of Staff for Intelligence where he was
responsible for future warfare, candidly outlines how
the map of the Middle East should be fundamentally
re-drawn, in a new imperial endeavour designed to
correct past errors. "Without such major boundary
revisions, we shall never see a more peaceful Middle
East," he observes, but then adds wryly: "Oh, and one
other dirty little secret from 5,000 years of history:
Ethnic cleansing works."

Thus, acknowledging that the sweeping reconfiguration
of borders he proposes would necessarily involve
massive ethnic cleansing and accompanying bloodshed on
perhaps a genocidal scale, he insists that unless it
is implemented, "we may take it as an article of faith
that a portion of the bloodshed in the region will
continue to be our own." Among his proposals are the
need to establish "an independent Kurdish state" to
guarantee the long-denied right to Kurdish
self-determination. But behind the humanitarian
sentiments, Maj. Peters declares that: "A Free
Kurdistan, stretching from Diyarbakir through Tabriz,
would be the most pro-Western state between Bulgaria
and Japan."

He chastises the United States and its coalition
partners for missing "a glorious chance" to fracture
Iraq, which "should have been divided into three
smaller states immediately." This would leave "Iraq's
three Sunni-majority provinces as a truncated state
that might eventually choose to unify with a Syria
that loses its littoral to a Mediterranean-oriented
Greater Lebanon: Phoenecia reborn." Meanwhile, the
Shia south of old Iraq "would form the basis of an
Arab Shia State rimming much of the Persian Gulf."
Jordan, a US-Israeli friend in the region, would
"retain its current territory, with some southward
expansion at Saudi expense. For its part, the
unnatural state of Saudi Arabia would suffer as great
a dismantling as Pakistan." Iran too would "lose a
great deal of territory to Unified Azerbaijan, Free
Kurdistan, the Arab Shia State and Free Baluchistan,
but would gain the provinces around Herat in today's
Afghanistan." Although this vast imperial programme
could be impossible to implement now, with time, "new
and natural borders will emerge", driven by "the
inevitable attendant bloodshed."

As for the goals of this plan, Maj. Peters is equally
candid. While including the necessary caveats about
fighting "for security from terrorism, for the
prospect of democracy", he also mentions the third
important issue -- "and for access to oil supplies in
a region that is destined to fight itself".

The whole thing sounds disturbingly familiar,
especially to those who have read the musings of then
Israeli Foreign Ministry official Oded Yinon.


Keeping the World Safe... for Our Economy

Despite trying to dress up his vision as an exercise
in attempting to selflessly democratize the Middle
East, in a contribution to the quarterly US Army War
College journal Parameters almost a decade ago, he
acknowledged with some jubilation that: "Those of us
who can sort, digest, synthesize, and apply relevant
knowledge soar--professionally, financially,
politically, militarily, and socially. We, the
winners, are a minority." This minority will
inevitably conflict with the vast majority of the
world's population. "For the world masses, devastated
by information they cannot manage or effectively
interpret, life is 'nasty, brutish . . . and
short-circuited.'" In "every country and region",
these masses who can neither "understand the new
world", nor "profit from its uncertainties... will
become the violent enemies of their inadequate
governments, of their more fortunate neighbors, and
ultimately of the United States." The coming clash,
then, is not really about blood, faith, ethnicity, at
all. It is about the gap between the haves and the
have-nots. "We are entering a new American century",
he says, in a veiled reference to the Bush
administration Project of the same name founded in the
same year he was writing. In the new century, "we will
become still wealthier, culturally more lethal, and
increasingly powerful. We will excite hatreds without
precedent."

In predicting the future course for the US Army, Maj.
Peters argues that: "We will see countries and
continents divide between rich and poor in a reversal
of 20th-century economic trends." In this context, he
says, "we in the United States will continue to be
perceived as the ultimate haves", and therefore,
"terrorism will be the most common form of violence",
along with "transnational criminality, civil strife,
secessions, border conflicts, and conventional wars."
Meanwhile, "in defense of its interests", the US "will
be required to intervene in some of these contests."
And then he sums it all up in one tidy paragraph:

"There will be no peace. At any given moment for the
rest of our lifetimes, there will be multiple
conflicts in mutating forms around the globe. Violent
conflict will dominate the headlines, but cultural and
economic struggles will be steadier and ultimately
more decisive. The de facto role of the US armed
forces will be to keep the world safe for our economy
and open to our cultural assault. To those ends, we
will do a fair amount of killing."

So what's prompted Maj. Peter's decision to air his
vision for the Middle East in the Armed Forces Journal
at this time in the wake of the latest Middle East
crisis? A number of critical developments.


Source: Imminent Global Crises Converge

According to an American source with high-level access
to the US military, political and intelligence
establishment, Western policymakers are in no doubt
that the world faces the imminent convergence of
multiple global crises. These crises threaten not only
to undermine the basis of Western power in its current
military and geopolitical configurations, but also to
destabilize the entire foundations of industrial
civilization.

The source said that the latest petroleum data
indicates that "global oil production most likely
peaked two years ago." This is consistent with the
findings of respected geologists such as leading oil
depletion expert Dr. Colin Campbell, who in the late
90s predicted that world oil production would peak in
the early 21st century. "We have come to the end of
the first half of the Oil Age," said Dr. Campbell, who
has a doctorate in geology from the University of
Oxford and more than 40 years of experience in the oil
industry. Similarly, Kenneth Deffeyes, a geologist and
professor emeritus at Princeton University, estimates
the occurrence of the peak near the end of last year.

The source also said that leading US financial
analysts privately believe that "a collapse of the
global banking system is imminent by 2008." Although
the warning is consistent with the public findings of
other experts, this is the first time that a more
precise date has been estimated. In a prescient
analysis drawing on highly placed financial sources,
US historian Gabriel Kolko, professor emeritus at York
University, concluded in late July that:

"All the factors which make for crashes – excessive
leveraging, rising interest rates, etc. – exist...
Contradictions now wrack the world's financial system,
and a growing consensus now exists between those who
endorse it and those, like myself, who believe the
status quo is both crisis-prone as well as immoral. If
we are to believe the institutions and personalities
who have been in the forefront of the defense of
capitalism, and we should, it may very well be on the
verge of serious crises."

The source also commented on the danger posed by rapid
climate change. Although most conventional estimates
suggest that global climate catastrophe is not due
before another 30 odd years, he argued that the
multiplication of several "tipping-points" suggested
that a series of devastating climatic events could be
"triggered within the next 10 to 15 years." Once
again, this is consistent with the findings of other
experts, most recently a joint task-force report by
the Institute for Public Policy Research in the UK,
the Center for American Progress in the US, and the
Australia Institute, which said in January last year
that if the average world temperature rises "two
degrees centigrade above the average world temperature
prevailing in 1750 before the industrial revolution",
it would trigger an irreversible chain of climatic
disasters. In its report, the task-force says:

"The possibilities include reaching climatic tipping
points leading, for example, to the loss of the West
Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets (which, between
them, could raise sea level more than 10 meters over
the space of a few centuries), the shutdown of the
thermohaline ocean circulation (and, with it, the Gulf
Stream), and the transformation of the planet's
forests and soils from a net sink of carbon to a net
source of carbon."

The source also revealed that US generals had
repeatedly war-gamed a prospective conflict with Iran,
but consistently found that the simulations predicted
"an absolute nuclear disaster", from which no clear
winner would emerge. The scenarios gamed were so
dismal, he said, that the generals briefed
administration officials to avoid such a war at all
costs. However, the source said that the Bush
administration is ignoring the fears of the US
military.

In this context, it would seem that the musings of
Maj. Peters issue less from a concerted confidence in
US power, than from a sense of growing desperation and
unease as the political, financial and energy
architecture of the global system is increasingly
fragmenting under the weight of its own inherent
instability. Despite the seeming gloominess of the
situation, however, there is clearly fundamental
dissent about the current trajectory of American and
Western policy at the highest levels of power. The
source remarked that "humanity is on the verge of a
precipice, and either we'll all just drop off the
edge, or we'll evolve. I'm not sure what that new
human being might look like, but it will clearly have
to involve a completely new set of ideas and values, a
new way of looking at the world that respects life and
nature."

Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed is the author of The London
Bombings: An Independent Inquiry. He teaches courses
in International Relations at the School of Social
Sciences and Cultural Studies, University of Sussex,
Brighton, where he is doing his PhD studying
imperialism and genocide. Since 9/11, he has authored
three other books revealing the realpolitik behind the
rhetoric of the "War on Terror", The War on Freedom,
Behind the War on Terror, and The War on Truth: 9/11,
Disinformation and the Anatomy of Terrorism. In summer
2005, he testified as an expert witness in US Congress
about his research on international terrorism. Visit
his blog http://nafeez.blogspot.com/

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