From: Francisco Javier Bernal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Date: Mon, 19 Nov 2001 23:46:26 -00
To: STOP NATO! <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Fw: WHY IRAQ MAY BE NEXT

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




> WHY IRAQ MAY BE NEXT
> by Enver Masud
>
>
> WASHINGTON, DC--Iraq may be next in line for a U.S. attack. Iraqi oil is
the coveted prize.
>
> Business Week writers Paul Strobin based in Moscow and Stan Crock based in
Washington, reveal the role that oil may play in a U.S.-Russia deal to
attack Iraq. Strobin and Crock write:
>
> "Putin could try to exact a steep price for allowing a decisive U.S.
strike against the oil-rich Iraqi state. Russian oil majors have curried
favor with Saddam's regime with an eye on future contracts. But if Bush
quietly guarantees that Russian oil companies will get a prime slice of the
Iraqi oil, Putin might go along. 'There is a good case for a
behind-the-scenes bargain,' says Dmitri Trenin, analyst at the Carnegie
Moscow Center. For now, Putin has called for the renewal of international
inspections in Iraq. If Saddam refuses, Putin can save face if the U.S. goes
after Iraq by citing Saddam's intransigence to his own proposal."
["U.S.-Russia: Just How Far Will the Love-in Go?", Business Week, November
26, 2001]
>
> In an October 1999 interview, former United Nations Special Commission
chief inspector Scott Ritter said, "Iraq has been disarmed. Iraq today
possesses no meaningful weapons of mass destruction." Ritter also said that
Iraq does not currently possess the capability to produce or deploy
chemical, biological, or nuclear weapons. Iraq's neighbor, Israel, is known
to possess such weapons.
>
> Despite this, the U.S. has used the bogey of Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction to embargo Iraq.
>
> "Ten years of sanctions have left an estimated 300,000 to 1.5 million
Iraqis dead. CBS' Lesley Stahl used the figure of 500,000 dead when she
interviewed Secretary of State Madeleine Albright in 1996. Was such
collateral damage worth it? Albright replied, 'I think this is a very hard
choice, but the price - we think the price is worth it.'"--[Editorial, "End
the Iraq War," Seattle Times, May 14, 2001]
>
> The embargo "has been compared with a medieval siege. The word 'genocide'
has been used by experts on international law and other cautious voices,
such as Denis Halliday, the former assistant secretary general of the United
Nations, who resigned as the UN's senior humanitarian official in Iraq, and
Hans von Sponeck, his successor, who also resigned in protest. Each had 34
years at the UN and were acclaimed in their field; their resignations, along
with the head of the World Food Programme in Baghdad, were unprecedented."
[John Pilger, "Iraq: The Great Cover-Up," New Statesman, January 22, 2001]
>
> Bombing Iraq has become routine.
>
> Denver Post Columnist,Reggie Rivers, writes: "The stories hit the paper
and we flip through them as if nothing is happening. The headlines read:
'Coalition planes fire at Iraqi air defense sites.' 'Air Force drone missing
over Iraq.' 'U.S. launches major air attack on Iraq.' 'Allied jets hit Iraqi
targets.'"
>
> And this would not be the first time that the U.S. has provoked a
confrontation with Iraq.
>
> "The United States urged United Nations weapons inspectors in 1998 to
deliberately provoke a confrontation with Baghdad to provide political cover
for a U.S. bombing campaign, a former inspector claims in a new film
documentary." [Ronni Berke, "Ex-U.N. Inspector in Iraq: U.S. Set Up Air
raids," CNN New York Bureau, July 19, 2001]
>
> President Bush is no stranger to the politics of oil.
>
> Mr. Charles Lewis, founder of the Center for Public Integrity, writes in
"The Buying of the President": George W. Bush was a director and shareholder
of Harken Energy when in January 1990 it was granted "exclusive rights to
carry out exploration, development, production, transportation, and
marketing of petroleum throughout most of Bahrain's Gulf offshore areas."
The company drilled two dry holes, but "Bush had sold off two-thirds of his
holdings in Harken for nearly a million dollars, and bought a small share of
the Texas Rangers, a deal that ultimately netted him--with a helping hand
from Texas taxpayers--some $15 million."
>
> Mr. Bush inherited his dad's foreign policy advisors: Richard B. Cheney,
Colin L. Powell, and Condoleeza Rice, and former Reaganite, Paul D.
Wolfowitz-- who believes in "exporting American values". They are pushing
for an attack on Iraq.
>


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