JohnMcLeod :
You have to think about the many motives of the war. The war is partly about oil, sure, but it is absolutely not solely about oil. "No blood for oil" is nothing more than a catchy phrase, it is not an argument.
The first thing I say to dispel the myth this war is about liberating the Iraqis is asking :
"Do you really believe Bush would have spent billion dollars, risk American lives and alienated the rest of the world for the altruistic sake of saving Iraqis ?"
People to whom I ask almost always answer "no", and agree with the idea this war has far darker motives than it pretends.
There are many motives for the war, it would be plain wrong to limit it to oil.
- This war can give political gain to Bush. Historically, leaders have always tried to unite their people behind them in the war. A successful war is a huge source of support during elections. It is especially important at a time where domestic problems (bad economy) are occuring.
- One of the reasons Bush raised dramatically the military funding was to help growth occuring again, by motivating demand. By raising the demand for weaponry, the gov indirectly raised the demand for high technolgy, steel and pretty much everything your industry produces. The aim was to significantly raise growth. It happened at the beginning, back in Q1 2002 when growth was estimated to 5,2% a year IIRC.
It is not a reason per se explaining how ill motivated the war is, but it partly explains the Hawkishness in the US recently.
- The US is still waging war against terrorism. The biggest supporter of Islamist fundamentalism and hence terrorism is Saudi Arabia. Saudi gives much money to Islamists, their recruitment machine (Coran schools), and other activities. The US would want to change this. However, it is impossible to do so with a high dependancy of foreign oil, especially when Iraq is hostile and Venezuela is in revolution.
In order to begin tensions with Saudi Arabia, it is necesary to find a reliable source of oil. Iraq has plenty of the reserves, wells and an already developed infrastructure. A puppet government there would be the reliable provider Bush needs so much.
This is the strongest "this is a war for oil" argument that I can think of.
- The US is enforcing the New World Order that emerged from the collapse of the USSR, leaving the US alone at the helm of the world. There is a raising opposition to American superpower (North Korea among the rogue States, France's and Germany's opposition in the UN) that shows this New World Order is encountering difficulties.
The US must show other countries it is willing to enforce this World Order where they are the boss.
In short : the US show everyone who's the top dog.
Iraq has it all to be attacked : despicable dictator, who'd justify how just the war is in the PR-opaganda. Weak army, who'd make such a war short of American casualties. Plenty of oil. No threatening WMD, unlike North Korea.
So much for the war being motivated by the sake of liberating Iraq. You can instill some hostility towards war to your fellows with it, but it won't be nearly enough. More to come next post.
You have to think about the many motives of the war. The war is partly about oil, sure, but it is absolutely not solely about oil. "No blood for oil" is nothing more than a catchy phrase, it is not an argument.
The first thing I say to dispel the myth this war is about liberating the Iraqis is asking :
"Do you really believe Bush would have spent billion dollars, risk American lives and alienated the rest of the world for the altruistic sake of saving Iraqis ?"
People to whom I ask almost always answer "no", and agree with the idea this war has far darker motives than it pretends.
There are many motives for the war, it would be plain wrong to limit it to oil.
- This war can give political gain to Bush. Historically, leaders have always tried to unite their people behind them in the war. A successful war is a huge source of support during elections. It is especially important at a time where domestic problems (bad economy) are occuring.
- One of the reasons Bush raised dramatically the military funding was to help growth occuring again, by motivating demand. By raising the demand for weaponry, the gov indirectly raised the demand for high technolgy, steel and pretty much everything your industry produces. The aim was to significantly raise growth. It happened at the beginning, back in Q1 2002 when growth was estimated to 5,2% a year IIRC.
It is not a reason per se explaining how ill motivated the war is, but it partly explains the Hawkishness in the US recently.
- The US is still waging war against terrorism. The biggest supporter of Islamist fundamentalism and hence terrorism is Saudi Arabia. Saudi gives much money to Islamists, their recruitment machine (Coran schools), and other activities. The US would want to change this. However, it is impossible to do so with a high dependancy of foreign oil, especially when Iraq is hostile and Venezuela is in revolution.
In order to begin tensions with Saudi Arabia, it is necesary to find a reliable source of oil. Iraq has plenty of the reserves, wells and an already developed infrastructure. A puppet government there would be the reliable provider Bush needs so much.
This is the strongest "this is a war for oil" argument that I can think of.
- The US is enforcing the New World Order that emerged from the collapse of the USSR, leaving the US alone at the helm of the world. There is a raising opposition to American superpower (North Korea among the rogue States, France's and Germany's opposition in the UN) that shows this New World Order is encountering difficulties.
The US must show other countries it is willing to enforce this World Order where they are the boss.
In short : the US show everyone who's the top dog.
Iraq has it all to be attacked : despicable dictator, who'd justify how just the war is in the PR-opaganda. Weak army, who'd make such a war short of American casualties. Plenty of oil. No threatening WMD, unlike North Korea.
So much for the war being motivated by the sake of liberating Iraq. You can instill some hostility towards war to your fellows with it, but it won't be nearly enough. More to come next post.
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