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>From The American Prospect website:

Just the Beginning
Is Iraq the opening salvo in a war to remake the world?

By Robert Dreyfuss
Issue Date: 4.1.03

For months Americans have been told that the United States is going to
war against Iraq in order to disarm Saddam Hussein, remove him from
power, eliminate Iraq's alleged stockpiles of weapons of mass
destruction, and prevent Baghdad from blackmailing its neighbors or
aiding terrorist groups. But the Bush administration's hawks, especially
the neoconservatives who provide the driving force for war, see the
conflict with Iraq as much more than that. It is a signal event,
designed to create cataclysmic shock waves throughout the region and
around the world, ushering in a new era of American imperial power. It
is also likely to bring the United States into conflict with several
states in the Middle East. Those who think that U.S. armed forces can
complete a tidy war in Iraq, without the battle spreading beyond Iraq's
borders, are likely to be mistaken.

"I think we're going to be obliged to fight a regional war, whether we
want to or not," says Michael Ledeen, a former U.S. national-security
official and a key strategist among the ascendant flock of
neoconservative hawks, many of whom have taken up perches inside the
U.S. government. Asserting that the war against Iraq can't be contained,
Ledeen says that the very logic of the global war on terrorism will
drive the United States to confront an expanding network of enemies in
the region. "As soon as we land in Iraq, we're going to face the whole
terrorist network," he says, including the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO), Hezbollah, Hamas, Islamic Jihad and a collection of
militant splinter groups backed by nations -- Iran, Syria and Saudi
Arabia -- that he calls "the terror masters."

"It may turn out to be a war to remake the world," says Ledeen.

In the Middle East, impending "regime change" in Iraq is just the first
step in a wholesale reordering of the entire region, according to
neoconservatives -- who've begun almost gleefully referring to
themselves as a "cabal." Like dominoes, the regimes in the region --
first Iran, Syria and Saudi Arabia, then Lebanon and the PLO, and
finally Sudan, Libya, Yemen and Somalia -- are slated to capitulate,
collapse or face U.S. military action. To those states, says cabal
ringleader Richard Perle, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise
Institute (AEI) and chairman of the Defense Policy Board, an influential
Pentagon advisory committee, "We could deliver a short message, a
two-word message: 'You're next.'" In the aftermath, several of those
states, including Iraq, Syria and Saudi Arabia, may end up as
dismantled, unstable shards in the form of mini-states that resemble
Yugoslavia's piecemeal wreckage. And despite the Wilsonian rhetoric from
the president and his advisers about bringing democracy to the Middle
East, at bottom it's clear that their version of democracy might have to
be imposed by force of arms.

And not just in the Middle East. Three-thousand U.S. soldiers are slated
to arrive in the Philippines, opening yet another new front in the war
on terrorism, and North Korea is finally in the administration's sights.
On the horizon could be Latin America, where the Bush administration
endorsed a failed regime change in Venezuela last year, and where new
left-leaning challenges are emerging in Brazil, Ecuador and elsewhere.
Like the bombing of Hiroshima, which stunned the Japanese into surrender
in 1945 and served notice to the rest of the world that the United
States possessed unparalleled power it would not hesitate to use, the
war against Iraq has a similar purpose. "It's like the bully in a
playground," says Ian Lustick, a University of Pennsylvania professor of
political science and author of Unsettled States, Disputed Lands. "You
beat up somebody, and everybody else behaves."

Over and over again, in speeches, articles and white papers, the
neoconservatives have made it plain that the war against Iraq is
intended to demonstrate Washington's resolve to implement President
Bush's new national-security strategy, announced last fall -- even if
doing so means overthrowing the entire post-World War II structure of
treaties and alliances, including NATO and the United Nations. In their
book, The War Over Iraq, William Kristol of The Weekly Standard and
Lawrence F. Kaplan of The New Republic write, "The mission begins in
Baghdad, but it does not end there. … We stand at the cusp of a new
historical era. … This is a decisive moment. … It is so clearly
about more than Iraq. It is about more even than the future of the
Middle East and the war on terror. It is about what sort of role the
United States intends to play in the twenty-first century."

Invading Iraq, occupying its capital and its oil fields, and seizing
control of its Shia Islamic holy places can only have a devastating and
highly destabilizing impact on the entire region, from Egypt to central
Asia and Pakistan. "We are all targeted," Syrian President Bashar Assad
told an Arab summit meeting, called to discuss Iraq, on March 1. "We are
all in danger."

"They want to foment revolution in Iran and use that to isolate and
possibly attack Syria in [Lebanon's] Bekaa Valley, and force Syria out,"
says former Assistant Secretary of State for Near East Affairs Edward S.
Walker, now president of the Middle East Institute. "They want to
pressure [Muammar] Quaddafi in Libya and they want to destabilize Saudi
Arabia, because they believe instability there is better than continuing
with the current situation. And out of this, they think, comes Pax
Americana."

The more immediate impact of war against Iraq will occur in Iran, say
many analysts, including both neoconservative and more impartial experts
on the Middle East. As the next station along the "axis of evil," Iran
holds power that's felt far and wide in the region. Oil-rich and
occupying a large tract of geopolitical real estate, Iran is arguably
the most strategically important country in its neighborhood. With its
large Kurdish population, Iran has a stake in the future of Iraqi
Kurdistan. As a Shia power, Iran has vast influence among the Shia
majority in Iraq, Lebanon and Bahrain, with the large Shia population in
Saudi Arabia's oil-rich eastern province and among the warlords of
western Afghanistan. And Iran's ties to the violent Hezbollah
guerrillas, whose anti-American zeal can only be inflamed by the
occupation of Iraq, will give the Bush administration all the reason it
needs to expand the war on terrorism to Tehran.

The first step, neoconservatives say, will be for the United States to
lend its support to opposition groups of Iranian exiles willing to
enlist in the war on terrorism, much as the Iraqi National Congress
served as the spearhead for American intervention in Iraq. And, just as
the doddering ex-king of Afghanistan served as a rallying point for
America's conquest of that landlocked, central Asian nation, the
remnants of the late former shah of Iran's royal family could be rallied
to the cause. "Nostalgia for the last shah's son, Reza Pahlavi … has
again risen," says Reuel Marc Gerecht, a former CIA officer who, like
Ledeen and Perle, is ensconced at the AEI. "We must be prepared,
however, to take the battle more directly to the mullahs," says Gerecht,
adding that the United States must consider strikes at both Iran's
Revolutionary Guard Corps and allies in Lebanon. "In fact, we have only
two meaningful options: Confront clerical Iran and its proxies
militarily or ring it with an oil embargo."

Iran is not the only country where restoration of monarchy is being
considered. Neoconservative strategists have also supported returning to
power the Iraqi monarchy, which was toppled in 1958 by a combination of
military officers and Iraqi communists. When the Ottoman Empire crumbled
after World War I, British intelligence sponsored the rise of a
little-known family called the Hashemites, whose origins lay in the
Saudi region around Mecca and Medina. Two Hashemite brothers were
installed on the thrones of Jordan and Iraq.

For nearly a year, the neocons have suggested that Jordan's Prince
Hassan, the brother of the late King Hussein of Jordan and a blood
relative of the Iraqi Hashemite family, might re-establish the
Hashemites in Baghdad were Saddam Hussein to be removed. Among the
neocons are Michael Rubin, a former AEI fellow, and David Wurmser, a
Perle acolyte. Rubin in 2002 wrote an article for London's Daily
Telegraph headlined, "If Iraqis want a king, Hassan of Jordan could be
their man." Wurmser in 1999 wrote Tyranny's Ally, an AEI-published book
devoted largely to the idea of restoring the Hashemite dynasty in Iraq.
Today Rubin is a key Department of Defense official overseeing U.S.
policy toward Iraq, and Wurmser is a high-ranking official working for
Undersecretary of State for Arms Control and International Security John
Bolton, himself a leading neoconservative ideologue.

But if the neocons are toying with the idea of restoring monarchies in
Iraq and Iran, they are also eyeing the destruction of the region's
wealthiest and most important royal family of all: the Saudis. Since
September 11, the hawks have launched an all-out verbal assault on the
Saudi monarchy, accusing Riyadh of supporting Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda
organization and charging that the Saudis are masterminding a worldwide
network of mosques, schools and charity organizations that promote
terrorism. It's a charge so breathtaking that those most familiar with
Saudi Arabia are at a loss for words when asked about it. "The idea that
the House of Saud is cooperating with al-Qaeda is absurd," says James
Akins, who served as U.S. ambassador to Saudi Arabia in the mid-1970s
and frequently travels to the Saudi capital as a consultant. "It's too
dumb to be talked about."

That doesn't stop the neoconservatives from doing so, however. In The
War Against the Terror Masters, Ledeen cites Wurmser in charging that,
just before 9-11, "Saudi intelligence had become difficult to
distinguish from Al Qaeda." Countless other, similar accusations have
been flung at the Saudis by neocons. Max Singer, co-founder of the
Hudson Institute, has repeatedly suggested that the United States seek
to dismantle the Saudi kingdom by encouraging breakaway republics in the
oil-rich eastern province (which is heavily Shia) and in the western
Hijaz. "After [Hussein] is removed, there will be an earthquake
throughout the region," says Singer. "If this means the fall of the
[Saudi] regime, so be it." And when Hussein goes, Ledeen says, it could
lead to the collapse of the Saudi regime, perhaps to pro-al-Qaeda
radicals. "In that event, we would have to extend the war to the Arabian
peninsula, at the very least to the oil-producing regions."

"I've stopped saying that Saudi Arabia will be taken over by Osama bin
Laden or by a bin Laden clone if we go into Iraq," says Akins. "I'm now
convinced that's exactly what [the neoconservatives] want. And then we
take it over."

Iraq, too, could shatter into at least three pieces, which would be
based on the three erstwhile Ottoman Empire provinces of Mosul, Baghdad
and Basra that were cobbled together to compose the state eight decades
ago. That could conceivably leave a Hashemite kingdom in control of
largely Sunni central Iraq, a Shia state in the south (possibly linked
to Iran, informally) and some sort of Kurdish entity in the north --
either independent or, as is more likely, under the control of the
Turkish army. Turkey, a reluctant player in George W. Bush's crusade,
fears an independent Kurdistan and would love to get its hands on Iraq's
northern oil fields around the city of Kirkuk.

The final key component for these map-redrawing, would-be Lawrences of
Arabia is the toppling of Assad's regime and the breakup of Syria. Perle
himself proposed exactly that in a 1996 document prepared for the
Institute for Advanced Strategic and Political Studies (IASPS), an
Israeli think tank. The plan, titled, "A Clean Break: A New Strategy for
Securing the Realm," was originally prepared as a working paper to
advise then-Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel. It called on
Israel to work with Turkey and Jordan to "contain, destabilize and
roll-back" various states in the region, overthrow Saddam Hussein in
Iraq, press Jordan to restore a scion of its Hashemite dynasty to the
Iraqi throne and, above all, launch military assaults against Lebanon
and Syria as a "prelude to a redrawing of the map of the Middle East
[to] threaten Syria's territorial integrity." Joining Perle in writing
the IASPS paper were Douglas Feith and Wurmser, now senior officials in
Bush's national-security apparatus.

Gary Schmitt, executive director of the Project for a New American
Century (PNAC), worries only that the Bush administration, including
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and Vice President Dick Cheney,
might not have the guts to see its plan all the way through once Hussein
is toppled. "It's going to be no small thing for the United States to
follow through on its stated strategic policy in the region," he says.
But Schmitt believes that President Bush is fully committed, having been
deeply affected by the events of September 11. Schmitt roundly endorses
the vision put forward by Kaplan and Kristol in The War Over Iraq, which
was sponsored by the PNAC. "It's really our book," says Schmitt.

Six years ago, in its founding statement of principles, PNAC called for
a radical change in U.S. foreign and defense policy, with a beefed-up
military budget and a more muscular stance abroad, challenging hostile
regimes and assuming "American global leadership." Signers of that
statement included Cheney; Rumsfeld; Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul
Wolfowitz; Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security
Affairs Peter W. Rodman; Elliott Abrams, the Near East and North African
affairs director at the National Security Council; Zalmay Khalilzad, the
White House liaison to the Iraqi opposition; I. Lewis Libby, Cheney's
chief of staff; and Gov. Jeb Bush (R-Fla.), the president's brother. The
PNAC statement foreshadowed the outline of the president's 2002
national-security strategy.

Scenarios for sweeping changes in the Middle East, imposed by U.S armed
forces, were once thought fanciful -- even ridiculous -- but they are
now taken seriously given the incalculable impact of an invasion of
Iraq. Chas Freeman, who served as U.S. ambassador to Saudi Arabia during
the Gulf War, worries about everything that could go wrong. "It's a war
to turn the kaleidoscope, by people who know nothing about the Middle
East," he says. "And there's no way to know how the pieces will fall."
Perle and Co., says Freeman, are seeking a Middle East dominated by an
alliance between the United States and Israel, backed by overwhelming
military force. "It's machtpolitik, might makes right," he says. Asked
about the comparison between Iraq and Hiroshima, Freeman adds, "There is
no question that the Richard Perles of the world see shock and awe as a
means to establish a position of supremacy that others fear to
challenge."

But Freeman, who is now president of the Middle East Policy Council,
thinks it will be a disaster. "This outdoes anything in the march of
folly catalog," he says. "It's the lemmings going over the cliff."

http://www.prospect.org/print/V14/4/dreyfuss-r.html

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