2003-03-19

Pat,

Thank you very much for sending this.  It seems the TRUTH is beginning to
take hold.  Pravda also wrote about the true reason for the war.  I just
hope that when it is over, and the world all together realises what Bush
did, they give him the ultimatum to leave Iraq at once, resign as President
of the US, or ELSE.  And or else means, the whole world dumps all of their
dollar reserves.  The world might not have the armed forces that Bush has,
but they economic ways to make Bush pay for his mistake.

And a mighty big one it is.

http://english.pravda.ru/world/2003/03/19/44604.html

John



----- Original Message -----
From: "Pat Naughtin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "kilopascal" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "U.S. Metric Association"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, 2003-03-19 17:26
Subject: The real reasons America is invading Iraq


> Dear John and All,
>
> This article is from 'The Age', an Australian newspaper published in
> Melbourne.  See www.theage.com.au
>
> In this article Kenneth Davidson, a staff columnist of 'The Age', suggests
> (in paragraph 13) that: 'The US would have to redirect domestic demand for
> imported goods paid for in dollar-denominated IOUs into exports to earn
yuan
> and euros to pay for US imports'.
>
> To me this is the link that ties this article to metrication. Of all the
> nations in the world, it would be more difficult for the USA to increase
> exports than it would be for any other nation. This is simply because the
> USA does not habitually use the units of measurement (SI or metric) used
by
> the rest of the world.
>
> (Note: John Howard is Prime Minister of Australia)
>
> Cheers,
>
> Pat Naughtin LCAMS
> Geelong, Australia
>
> Begin Article
>
> The real reasons America is invading Iraq
> March 20 2003
>
> America is seeking to ward off any threat to its economic domination of
the
> world, writes Kenneth Davidson.
>
> George Bush planned "regime change" in Iraq before becoming United States
> President in January 2001. The events of September 11, 2001, were the
> pretext for invasion of Iraq, not the reason.
>
> The blueprint for the creation of a "global Pax America", to which Bush
> subscribes and which is driving the invasion of Iraq, was drawn up in
> September 2000 for Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, Jeb Bush
> (George's younger brother) and Lewis Libby (Cheney's chief of staff).
>
> The document, called Rebuilding America's Defences: strategies, forces and
> resources for a new century, was written in September 2000 by the
> neo-conservative think tank Project for the New American Century.
>
> According to the document, written three months before Bush became
> president, "the US for decades sought to play a more permanent role in
Gulf
> regional security. While unresolved conflict with Iraq provides the
> immediate justification, the need for substantial American force presence
in
> the Gulf transcends the issue of the regime of Saddam Hussein."
>
> The document outlines the global ambitions of the Bush Administration. It
> sets out a "blueprint for maintaining global US pre-eminence, precluding
the
> rise of a great power rival, and shaping the international security order
in
> line with American principles and interests".
>
> The question for John Howard must be: to what extent does his Government
> subscribe to the Bush strategy outlined in the think tank's document?
>
> Howard says Australia's participation in this war is in Australia's
national
> interests. How?
>
> To answer that question we must know why the war is being fought in the
> first place. For all I know, Bush, Howard and Tony Blair may be absolutely
> sincere when they claim that getting rid of Saddam is a humanitarian act
> that will make the Iraqis better off, or that Saddam has the will, the
> motive and the weapons of mass destruction capable of threatening other
> countries. But these are not the real reasons for the invasion.
>
> The real reasons can be summed up as deciding who controls Middle East oil
> and gets access to the water from the Tigris and Euphrates, and what
> currency will be used to pay for the development of the oil and water
> resources.
>
> According to the think tank document, the US would have to increase its
> defence spending to 3.8 per cent of GDP (which it has just achieved) to
> finance an American military capability "to fight and decisively win
> multiple, simultaneous major theatre wars" and to "perform constabulary
> duties associated with shaping the security environment in critical
> regions".
>
> This is a massive task that can only be achieved if the US can continue to
> draw on the resources of the whole world, which in turn is only possible
if
> the US can continue to run massive trading deficits with Western Europe,
> China and Japan. In other words, these regions must remain willing to
> exchange the product of their industries for American dollars.
>
> It would be fatal to America's global strategic ambitions if countries in
> Europe began to ask for euros instead of US dollars for their exports, or
if
> China demanded settlement of their accounts with the US in yuan instead of
> US dollars. The US would have to redirect domestic demand for imported
goods
> paid for in dollar-denominated IOUs into exports to earn yuan and euros to
> pay for US imports.
>
> It is difficult to see how the US could develop new, internationally
> competitive industries and run a military machine on the scale envisaged
by
> the think tank without a massive increase in taxation and redistribution
of
> wealth to the productive elements in the economy without precipitating a
> global recession.
>
> In 2000, Saddam's regime had the temerity to demand payment in euros for
the
> trickle of Iraqi oil the US has allowed onto the international market.
Iran
> and Venezuela are following Iraq's example. This is the real threat to US
> hegemony.
>
> If the US can control Middle East oil production, it can control the
> industrial development of Europe, China and Japan (and Australia), to
> prevent a rival to its hegemony emerging. But to do this it must retain
the
> greenback as the world currency.
>
> It is possible to make a weak case based on realpolitik why Blair is along
> for the ride with Bush in Iraq (BP and Shell), but it is impossible to see
> what Australia will get out of this adventure even if it "succeeds".
>
> Bush personifies the American quest for absolute security. Americans don't
> yet understand or care that this status can only be achieved by making
> everybody else absolutely insecure.
>
> This is why the most lasting thing to come out of the war with Iraq is
> likely to be the faster development of a unified Western Europe and an
> economically powerful China to challenge US hegemony.
>
> Kenneth Davidson is a staff columnist.
>

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