HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------

http://www.hinduonnet.com/stories/2002100101601400.htm

The Hindu
October 1, 2002

Iraq part of U.S. grand strategy in West Asia [Middle
East]
By Atul Aneja 

-Security analysts in Iraq's neighbourhood are
increasingly veering round to the view that the U.S.
exertions in Iraq are the centrepiece of changing the
geopolitical map in the region in its favour.
Washington's first core objective, by unleashing and
winning a war, they say, is to make Iraqi territory
the springboard for acquiring complete political
dominance of the resource rich region. 


MANAMA (BAHRAIN) Sept. 30. In its on-going effort to
justify a war with Iraq, the Bush administration is
trying to set the stage for promoting two of its core
strategic objectives in the region, analysts in the
region say. 

Security analysts in Iraq's neighbourhood are
increasingly veering round to the view that the U.S.
exertions in Iraq are the centrepiece of changing the
geopolitical map in the region in its favour.
Washington's first core objective, by unleashing and
winning a war, they say, is to make Iraqi territory
the springboard for acquiring complete political
dominance of the resource rich region. 

One view that is gaining salience here is that the
U.S. may have already decided on the broad contours of
a Washington-friendly regime in Baghdad after the
Iraqi President, Saddam Hussein, is unseated. While
the details of this plan may not have yet been fully
defined, the effort is likely to revolve around the
resurrection of the remnants of the Iraqi royalty that
was violently ousted in 1958. Iraq at one time was
ruled by one branch of the Hashemite dynasty that is
currently positioned in neighbouring Jordan. 

The London-based Al-Sharif Ali bin Hussein, who has a
Hashemite lineage and who is the maternal cousin of
Iraq's former monarch, King Faisal, is currently the
focus of attention in Britain and the United States.
In London, Mr. Hussein leads the Constitutional
Monarchy Movement (CMM) for Iraq since 1990. The
Hashemite angle to the post-Saddam disposition in Iraq
was also evident when Prince Hussein, the uncle of
Jordan's King Abdullah, attended a conference of
Iraq's military opposition groups in London this
summer. 

Strategic forecasters in the region anticipate that
the resurrection of a Hashemite rule in Baghdad is
likely to be part of a larger political change in the
region. Jordan's merger with Iraq in the future is not
ruled out, though the possibility of the formation of
a Jordan-Iraq confederation under the two branches of
the Hashemite dynasty is more likely. The status of
Southern Iraq that is dominated by Iraqi Shias who
comprise nearly half of the country's population is
also under serious debate. Basra in Southern Iraq,
that is increasingly the focus of U.S. and British air
raids, is at the head of the Persian Gulf and is at
the heart of Iraq's oil industry. There is
considerable speculation among the Arab intelligentsia
that a new political arrangement between Kuwait and
parts of Southern Iraq after Mr. Hussein is out of the
picture maybe on the cards. Analysts point out that
U.S. consolidation in Iraq is likely to be the first
step that would put countries such as Iran on notice.
The new U.S. doctrine of pre-emptive intervention that
allows the use of force against emerging threats can
be invoked for this purpose. 

According to diplomatic sources, Iran's association
with the militant group Hezbollah that is widely
accused of launching terror attacks can, in the
future, be cited to justify a more assertive U.S.
approach towards Teheran. 

Control over oil prices appears to be the second core
objective of Washington's grand strategy in the
region. That means breaking the backbone of the Saudi
Arabia-dominated oil cartel OPEC that has favoured
keeping oil prices at a high between $22 and $28
dollars a barrel. But by finding access to Iraqi oil,
and with Russia already emerging as a major oil
supplier, the U.S. would be much better positioned to
combat the OPEC by controlling oil supplies and
prices. 

Iraqi oil, however, is unlikely to flood the
international market immediately. It is likely to take
at least four to five years before Iraqi oil
infrastructure is brought into shape, allowing Baghdad
to push in supplies to around five million barrels per
day, that along with Russia's around eight million
barrels per day, could bring down energy prices
significantly.



__________________________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
New DSL Internet Access from SBC & Yahoo!
http://sbc.yahoo.com

---------------------------
ANTI-NATO INFORMATION LIST

==^================================================================
This email was sent to: [email protected]

EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here: http://topica.com/u/?a84x2u.bacIlu
Or send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

T O P I C A -- Register now to manage your mail!
http://www.topica.com/partner/tag02/register
==^================================================================

Reply via email to