Soon
after the twin towers of the World Trade Centre in
Manhattan had come down ten years ago, a meeting of
top US officials was held, where Condoleeza Rice reportedly
posed the question: how can we make use of this tragedy?
The concern was neither with the tragedy itself, nor
even with bringing its perpetrators to justice; it
was with utilizing the opportunity provided by it
for furthering US ''interests''. And such utilization,
it was mooted at that meeting, could best be done
through an invasion of Iraq. Even though Saddam Husain's
hostility to the al-Qaeda was well-known, and even
though common sense would suggest that if the US was
serious about launching an offensive against al-Qaeda,
then toppling Saddam Husain was the last thing it
should be thinking of at that moment, it was precisely
this project which was placed on top of the US agenda
and implemented in due course.
Lies about Iraq possessing ''weapons of mass destruction''
were assiduously spread to prepare the ground for
the invasion. At the Chilcot hearings, investigating
the background to the invasion of Iraq, the former
head of MI-5, Britain's domestic intelligence agency,
testified that both American and British intelligence
services knew before the invasion that Saddam Husain
posed no serious security threat (quoted in Chomsky's
''Was There an Alternative?''); and yet the invasion
was carried out, and that too without any UN mandate
of the sort that even allies like France were asking
for.
The motive for this invasion was obvious: to capture
Iraqi oil. Alan Greenspan, the former Chairman of
the Federal Reserve, not only says so explicitly in
his autobiography, but even decries American official
squeamishness about admitting this fact openly. Iraq
has the third largest officially confirmed oil reserves
in the world, at 143 billion barrels; unofficially,
geological surveys and seismic data put Iraq's oil
reserves at 350 billion barrels, which is the largest
in the world. The US wanted to capture these massive
reserves. The reason is not only the obvious one,
of meeting its huge domestic consumption; there is
a more subtle and significant reason as well, which
has to do with the strength of its currency.
Under the Bretton Woods system the US dollar was officially
sanctified to be ''as good as gold'', since its price
in terms of gold was pegged at $35 per ounce. The
dollar was the reserve currency and constituted the
stable medium in terms of which much of the world's
wealth was held. Of course it was not the only medium
for holding wealth; there were other currencies as
well in terms of which wealth was also held. But these
other currencies (or currency-denominated assets)
also constituted repositories of wealth only because
their relative values in terms of the US dollar were
fixed, and wealth-holders had confidence that they
would remain so.
Even after the Bretton Woods system collapsed, and
the world moved to a system of floating exchange rates,
the US dollar continues to be the medium in terms
of which much of the world's wealth is still held.
This of course is essential for world capitalism which
cannot do without a stable medium of wealth-holding,
but, for the dollar to fulfil this role, of being,
in the perception of the world's wealth-holders,''
as good as gold'', even though its value is not formally
fixed in terms of gold, it must satisfy a crucial
condition. The condition is that its price vis-à-vis
the universe of commodities must not be expected to
decline secularly (or, more accurately, it must not
be expected to decline at a rate that more than offsets
the carrying costs of commodities). Put differently,
commodity prices in terms of dollars must not rise
too fast, for, if that happened, then wealth-holders
would rather hold commodities than dollars or dollar-denominated
assets.
This in turn requires two conditions: first, money
wages in the US must not rise too fast; second, dollar
prices of critical inputs must not rise too fast.
(These two conditions can be rolled into one: the
dollar prices of commodities, including labour power,
must not rise too fast). The reserve army of labour
that exists in the US (and that has always existed,
even before the current crisis) ensures that the dollar
price of labour power in the US does not rise too
fast. Likewise, the massive labour reserves existing
in third world primary commodity-producing economies
ensure that agricultural primary commodities, at any
rate, do not witness too rapid increases in prices
in a secular sense: they may witness sharp price fluctuations
but secular increases are controlled by squeezing
the third world's absorption of such commodities (since
money wages there are not indexed to price increases).
But that leaves commodities that are scarce natural
resources, among which by far the most significant
is oil. The role of the US dollar as a stable medium
for holding wealth, which is of crucial importance
both for the US (for it is what allows the US to run
persistent current account deficits on its balance
of payments), and also for the entire capitalist world
(for it gives all the wealth-holders everywhere a
reliable receptacle for holding their wealth), hinges
therefore upon the dollar price of oil not rising
too rapidly in a secular sense (though it may fluctuate).
US control over the world's oil supplies is a means
of instilling confidence among the world's wealth
holders that the dollar will continue to be a stable
medium for holding wealth, ''as good as gold'', even
though it is not officially exchangeable against gold
at a fixed price. The necessity for the US to control
the world's oil supplies arises therefore not only
because it needs the oil for its domestic consumption,
but also for propping up the dollar which is essential
both for its own economy (to be able to keep borrowing)
and also for the world capitalist system as a whole
(for which the dollar constitutes a stable medium
for holding wealth).
The invasion of Iraq however turned out very differently
for the US from what had been visualised. While the
Saddam regime was toppled easily, the war dragged
on against domestic resistance groups and the country
got fragmented. As a result even the government that
was installed, in order to get some credibility, had
to act in ways different from what had been visualised
at the time of invasion. An Oil Law that would have
handed over Iraq's oil reserves to foreign companies
was defeated in parliament. Oil continued to be State
property, though foreign oil companies were allowed
to pump it for a fixed price per barrel. The companies
themselves were chosen through a process of competitive
bidding. And given the uncertainties arising from
the conflict between the Kurds and the regime in Baghdad,
and the low bids put forward by Chinese and Russian
companies, the profit prospects on pumping Iraqi oil
were not attractive enough for American oil companies,
which either stayed away from the bidding or were
shut out of it.
The US, in short, despite the enormous human suffering
it inflicted upon the Iraqi population and upon its
own youth enlisted into the invading force, and despite
the enormous cost it had to bear for fighting the
war (in excess of $ 3 trillion according to some estimates),
did not achieve its original objective of getting
control over Iraq's oil reserves. True, with a client
State controlling the oil reserves, which is not even
a member of OPEC at present, the US can exert pressure
to keep oil prices within bounds, so that the supremacy
of the dollar is not challenged, and in that sense
meet part of its original objective; but it is a moot
point if this much alone could not have been ensured
without the invasion. The war brought huge profits
to corporate entities with close ties with US government
leaders, like Halliburton in which Dick Cheney had
an interest. But the grand imperialist project quite
clearly came a cropper, even as the war contributed
greatly towards undermining the stability of the order,
both through domestic disaffection because of its
direct and indirect (economic) effects, and also by
reducing US imperialism's capacity to intervene in
Latin America at a crucial time.
What is remarkable about imperialist follies however
is that they tend to repeat themselves. We now have
a repetition of the Iraq misadventure in Libya. Here
too the original UN resolution was intended only to
prevent massacres and human rights violations arising
from the pounding of rebel positions by Gaddafi's
forces. But US imperialism and its allies saw in it
a great opportunity to capture Libya's oil reserves,
the largest in Africa, the ninth largest in the world,
and particularly attractive because the extraction
costs are extremely low (as low as $ 1 per barrel).
So they went beyond the UN resolution and brought
about, in violation of all canons of international
law, a ''regime change'' which they justified predictably
in the name of ushering in ''democracy'' (even while
silently applauding Saudi Arabia's crushing of the
pro-democracy movement in Bahrain).
But, as in Iraq, their dream of installing a regime
of their choice which will then rule ''peacefully''
to their satisfaction for years to come, even as they
capture the country's oil wealth, is going to be shattered.
Chris Hedges, a well-known American journalist, has
this to say about Libya: ''I know enough of Libya,
a country I covered for many years as the Middle East
bureau chief for The New York Times, to assure you
that the chaos and bloodletting have only begun… we
should never have become the air force, trainers,
suppliers, special forces and enablers of rival tribal
factions, goons under the old regime and Islamists
that are divided among themselves by deep animosities
and a long history of violent conflict''.
Osama bin Laden had "repeatedly asserted that
the only way to drive the U.S. from the Muslim world
and defeat its satraps was by drawing Americans into
a series of small but expensive wars that would ultimately
bankrupt them" (Eric Margolis quoted in Chomsky).
For this purpose however no agency of Osama or his
outfit was necessary; the imperialist quest for control
over oil resources was quite enough. With the Libyan
misadventure coming on top of Afghanistan and Iraq,
from neither of which the US has managed to extricate
itself as yet, imperialist follies are piling up.
September
14, 2011.
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