URL for his article is http://emperors-clothes.com/articles/choss/bombs.htm
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[Emperor's Clothes]

How War and Globalization Support American Business…

As Billions Flow to Oil and Defense Companies - 
Bombing Of Baghdad Staves Off Financial Uncertainty
by Michel Chossudovsky [2-19-2001]
Professor of Economics, University of Ottawa, author of The Globalization of 
Poverty, second edition, Common Courage Press, 2001.

On Friday February 16th, spurred on by the dot-com implosion and the 
climactic downfall of Nortel Networks Corporation, the World's leader in 
fiber optics, the value of high tech stocks plummeted on Wall Street in 
turbulent trading. The NASDAQ stock index declined by more than five percent 
to a record low.

But it could have been much worse. Did the bombing of Baghdad pull Wall 
Street out of danger? In fact it did more than that. It put billions of 
dollars into the deep pockets of Defense contractors and oil companies.

WARNINGS FROM WALL STREET

In the days leading up to the February 16 near-meltdown, stock market 
analysts had warned of a worst-case scenario. High tech stocks were heavily 
overvalued. 

But that day at 1.00pm, a few hours before trading closed on the New York 
Stock Exchange, American and British warplanes bombed Baghdad in what the 
Pentagon described as "a routine mission of self-defense." 

Routine self defense? The US media applauded. And on Wall Street, brokers did 
more than applaud; they gasped with relief. For in a cruel irony, the bombing 
raids had saved the day. As one British financial analyst noted with 
contempt: 

"..the American market didn't collapse. It didn't plummet. Indeed, the fall 
was less than one per cent. This was a routine day - unless you happened to 
live in Baghdad."1 
Meanwhile, with telecom and computer stocks in the doldrums, financial and 
defense analysts had been working hard to rebuild "confidence in the stock 
market": 

"Makers of the nation's warfare technologies along with Wall Street analysts 
and industry consultants spent a week bragging about new opportunities and 
the likelihood of changes to Pentagon policy that would foster growth after 
15 years of strained budgets. What's more, defense and aerospace stocks ended 
on a high note, climbing amid a broad market slump as 24 U.S. and British 
warplanes struck Iraqi military targets using various long-range, 
precision-guided weapons."2 
In the last hours of trading on the 16th, defense stocks spiraled; oil and 
energy stocks boomed following news that Iraq's oil industry might be 
impaired. The value of Exxon, Chevron and Texaco stocks shot up. Harken 
Energy Corporation --in which George W. Bush served as company director and 
corporate consultant before entering politics-- gained 5.4% by the end of 
trading. Harken Energy happens to be a key player in Colombian oil (with a 
multi-billion dollar US military aid package under "Plan Colombia" on hand to 
protect its investments). Harken Energy CEO Mikel Faulkner is a former 
business associate of George W.

FINANCIAL MELTDOWN

The February 16th meltdown was already being predicted at the close of 
trading on the 15th. Business analysts on the evening news said that a major 
"correction" in the value of high tech stocks was "inevitable". The financial 
press had previously hinted that the US defense industry could also take a 
beating if the new Bush Administration were to curtail military procurement. 

A few days earlier, Lockheed Martin (LMT) --America's largest defense 
contractor-- had announced major cuts in its satellite division due to "flat 
demand" in the commercial satellite market. A company spokesman had reassured 
Wall Street that Lockheed "was moving in the right direction" by shifting 
financial resources out of its troubled commercial (that is, civilian) 
undertakings into the lucrative production of advanced weapon systems. 

For weeks, defense contractors had been actively lobbying the new 
Administration. On Tuesday February 12th, President Bush promised to hike 
defense spending based on "a comprehensive review of the military." According 
to The New York Times (12 February 2001), George W. Bush said:

"he planned to break with Pentagon orthodoxy and create 'a new architecture 
for the defense of America and our allies,' investing in new technologies and 
weapons systems rather than making 'marginal improvements' for systems in 
which America's arms industry has invested billions of dollars." 
On the 14th, he confirmed "a $2.6 billion increase in the Pentagon's budget 
as a 'down payment' on new-weapons research and development."3 

And two days later Baghdad was bombed by the US Air Force.

The raids were a signal to Wall Street that Bush's promise "to revitalize the 
nation's defense" should be taken seriously. Had the Bush administration 
decided otherwise, Lockheed Martin's listing on the New York Stock exchange 
might well have experienced the same fate as that of Nortel. In fact, while 
(civilian) high tech stocks (quoted on the NASDAQ) had plummeted, Lockheed 
Martin stocks ended the day up a comfortable 1.6%. 

Meanwhile, the F-22 Raptor high tech fighter jet was already scheduled 
--pending the Administration's final approval-- to be assembled (at an 
estimated cost of $60 billion) at Lockheed Martin Marietta's plant in Georgia:

"Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld was an F-22 advocate before joining the 
Bush administration, and Lockheed officials said Thursday [February 15th , 
one day before the raids on Baghdad] they are confident Rumsfeld will support 
the technologically advanced plane." 4 
The message to financial markets was crystal clear: the bear market was 
hitting "civilian" high tech stocks including Nortel, Dell Computers and 
Hewlett Packard; but defense industry listings --including Boeing, General 
Dynamics, Lockheed Martin, Northrop-Grumman and Raytheon (the "Big Five" 
defense contractors) -- remained "safe" and "promising." (i.e. "a good place 
to put your money"). Wall Street analysts had concluded --without batting an 
eyelid-- that 

"with the Bush administration's focus on defense, there is optimism the 
industry is on target to outperform the market again this year."5 
The new buzz phrase on Wall Street is that --despite the slow-down of the US 
economy-- defense stocks constitute "a safe-haven shelter from the dot-com 
implosion". More generally, the assumptions underlying Bush's new defense 
budget are considered "good for business": no wonder pension funds and 
institutional investors are busy changing the structure of their portfolios! 

NEW WORLD 'ORDER'

War and globalization go hand in hand. Militarisation is an integral part of 
the neoliberal agenda. The build-up of the defense budget contributes to 
beefing up the "Big Five" US defense contractors, while denying financial 
resources to civilian programs including health, education and social welfare 
not to mention the rebuilding of America's deteriorating urban 
infrastructure. Whereas defense production has spiraled, recession has hit 
the sectors of the US economy which produce "civilian" consumer goods and 
services. The U.S. domestic economy increasingly hinges on the military 
industrial complex and the sale of luxury goods (travel, leisure, luxury 
cars, etc.). And this satisfies the financial establishment irrespective of 
the needs of ordinary people. 

The bombing raids on Baghdad were certainly intended to intimidate countries 
committed to ending the sanctions on Iraq. But more generally, "missile 
diplomacy" is applied to enforce American political and economic domination 
under the guise of what is euphemistically called "the free market." 

"The hidden hand of the market will never work without a hidden fist – 
McDonald’s cannot flourish without McDonnell Douglas, the designer of the 
F-15."6 
And America's war machine is used in support of the conquest of new economic 
frontiers. In the Middle East, the Balkans and Central Asia, the US military 
is positioning itself directly and through NATO not only to support the 
interests of the Anglo-American oil conglomerates, which are working hand in 
glove with defense contractors in lucrative joint ventures, but to further 
colonize the former Soviet Union and Asian countries. Meanwhile, spiraling 
defense spending pours wealth into the military industrial complex at the 
expense of civilian needs. 

NOTES

Sunday Mail, London, 18 February 2001. 
Reuters, 16 February 2001. About 80 warplanes were involved, of which 24 were 
strike aircraft. See Financial Times, 17 February 2001. 
"Bush Vows To Modernize Military After Pentagon Review Is Completed", The 
Bulletin's Frontrunner, 14 February 2001. 
Dave Hirschman, "F-22's Fate to be Decided Next Month; Not on hold: Bush's 
Defense Review won't delay Judgment on Raptor", The Atlanta Journal and 
Constitution, 16 February 2001. 
The Nightly Business Report, NPR, 19 February 2001. 
Thomas L. Friedman, "A Manifesto for the Fast World," 'New York Times 
Magazine', Mar. 28, 1999.) 
C Copyright by Michel Chossudovsky, Ottawa, February 2001. All rights 
reserved. Permission is granted to post this text on non-commercial community 
internet sites, provided the essay remains intact and the copyright note is 
displayed. To publish this text in printed and/or other form, contact the 
author at [EMAIL PROTECTED], fax: 1-514-4256224. 

Send this article to a friend! [Does not work with all email programs...]

Further reading -

Some Other articles by Professor Chossudovsky 

State Terror and the "Free Market" Opening up Kosovo to Foreign Capital at 
http://emperors-clothes.com/articles/chuss/opening.htm

The Trepca Takeover: Part of a Pattern of Criminalazing Kosovo at 
http://emperors-clothes.com/articles/chuss/opening.htm

'German Foreign Minister Calls for Permanent German Troop Occupation of 
Yugoslavia 'at http://emperors-clothes.com/news/occupation.htm

'The IMF & World Bank Just Two of the Instruments for National Destruction ' 
at http://emperors-clothes.com/articles/chuss/instru.htm

'The International Monetary Fund And The Yugoslav Elections' at 
http://emperors-clothes.com/analysis/1.htm

Yugoslav Opposition Negotiates Surrender of Yugoslavia at 
http://emperors-clothes.com/analysis/11.htm

The Nuts and Bolts of a Scam...How the U.S. has Created a Corrupt Opposition 
in Serbia at http://emperors-clothes.com/analysis/scam.htm

The UN Appoints an Alleged War Criminal at 
http://emperors-clothes.com/articles/chuss/unandthe.htm

U.S. Instigated Mob Attempts a Coup Against Democracy in Yugoslavia (revised) 
at http://emperors-clothes.com/analysis/coup.htm

Washington Votes Massive 'Aid' to Opposition in Yugoslav Runoff at 
http://emperors-clothes.com/articles/chuss/wash.htm

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