Failures in Iraq repeat history 
November 21, 2004  
BY EDWIN BLACK       
(http://a3.suntimes.com/RealMedia/ads/click_nx.ads/www.suntimes.com/output/otherviews/@Middle?x)
 
America cannot succeed in Iraq until we understand the history we ignored and 
 recently repeated. For the past century, Iraq has offered only one 
attraction to  the Western powers: oil. It has been a fatal attraction.  
During World War I, Britain invaded Mesopotamia (as the three neglected  
Turkish provinces were called) for oil and only for oil. Despite this, the  
British declared in their May 18, 1918, proclamation, read aloud in Baghdad:  
''Our 
armies do not come into your cities and lands as conquerors or enemies,  but 
as liberators.''  
As part of that liberation, the British illegally seized the most valuable  
oil lands in Mesopotamia, the Kurdish Mosul region, this on Nov. 7, 1918, a 
full  week after the general armistice with Turkey. This invasion enabled 
Britain 
to  cobble three ethnically separate provinces together -- Kurdish Mosul, 
Sunni  Baghdad and Shiite Basra -- into a single land that London would rename 
Iraq.  The name ''Iraq'' came from the ancient Arab cartographic designation.  
The British then established Iraq as a nation for the sole purpose of  
structuring the exploitation of its oil. Arnold Wilson, the British civil  
administrator of Mesopotamia, the man who authorized General William Marshall's 
 
unauthorized push into Mosul, wrote, ''Thanks to General Marshall, we had  
established de facto, the principle that Mosul is part of 'Iraq,' to use the  
geographical expression. . . . Whether for the woe or weal of the inhabitants,  
it is 
too soon to say.'' Wilson added that, had General Marshall waited just 24  
hours for the restraining instructions from London to arrive, history would be  
otherwise. But, Wilson continued, Marshall did not wait to invade Mosul, and so 
 
''laid the foundation stone of the future State of Iraq.''  
But Arab and Islamic nationalists in the newly invented Iraq did not want to  
share their land with infidel European Christians. Nor did they choose to 
share  European values of democracy and pluralism, ideals that had never taken 
root in  the Islamic Middle East for 7,000 years. It did not take long for the 
Iraqis to  rise up in terror raids, burning, bombing, kidnapping and massacring 
Westerners,  including those sent to commercially develop the land and its 
waterways.  
The outraged British response to such horrors was aerial bombardment to shock 
 and awe the villages. But the Iraqi violence and the British resolve to 
combat  it with troops and tanks persisted, all for the oil wealth of Iraq.  
After World War I, the British and the French, becoming ever more dependent  
upon oil, engineered a secret petroleum pact, sanctioned by the League of  
Nations, which divided up oil drilling and pipeline rights in Syria and Iraq.  
The oil pact was announced at San Remo the same day the League of Nations  
granted mandates to Britain to rule oil-rich Iraq, and France to rule Syria  
where 
the pipelines would run to the Mediterranean. The British worked hard to  
instill democratic values in Iraq, thus creating a stable environment for the  
oil 
to flow. But it was a governance disaster because the people did not want  
it. Genocide against minorities, ethnic cleansing, repression, corruption and  
neglect were the rule in Iraq for years.  
Major John Glubb, the British officer who organized the Arab Legion,  
complained bitterly in a letter to Whitehall. ''We . . . imagined that we had  
bestowed on the Iraqis all these blessings of democracy. ... Nothing could be  
more 
undemocratic than the result. A handful of politicians obtained possession  of 
the machinery of government, and all the elections were rigged. . . . In this 
 process they all became very rich.''  
For eight more decades, the West -- now with the United States joining France 
 and Britain -- has tried to hang onto its oil lifeline in the Middle East, 
using  our diplomats, corporate surrogates and militaries. That has only fueled 
the  cycle of insurrection and now world terrorism from a people who resent 
our  presence and resource exploitation, and have always understood better than 
 anyone exactly why we are there. It is not sand we crave in Iraq, it is oil. 
 
America will never succeed in Iraq, if we once again naively expect democracy 
 to take root there and flourish. What can possibly occur next week to 
transform  that society that has not occurred for 7,000 years?  
The only way to succeed in Iraq is to survive long enough to intelligently  
withdraw, and then rapidly -- at breakneck speed -- develop alternative energy  
resources to detach us from this far-off place where we are not wanted, where 
we  should not be, and upon which our industrialized world is now dependent.  
Edwin Black is the New York Times bestselling and award-winning author  of 
IBM and the Holocaust. This commentary is adapted from his  just-released book, 
Banking on Baghdad, Inside Iraq's 7,000-Year History  of War, Profit, and 
Conflict (Wiley), which chronicles 7,000 years of  Iraqi history.  




[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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