counter Saudi Arabia : MGx – Musings, Essays & Ballads

All Posts Tagged With: "Saudi Arabia"

Olbermann on Bushonomics

While our troops are suffering and dying Bush economics keeps the top wealth right at the top.

US dependence upon foreign oil weakens our economy

While begging the Saudis for oil recently, Bush must have felt his clout slipping away as the topic of discussion turned always back to who would become his replacement.

The Saudis may give Bush little comfort: Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said in Riyadh that more crude would be pumped only “when the market justifies it.” The minister noted that economies were still growing with oil higher than $90 a barrel, and said that his country wanted to avoid “cycles of volatility.”

Saudi Arabia supplies the United States with about 1.4 million barrels of crude oil a day, one-seventh of U.S. imports and second only to the 1.9 million barrels from Canada. Saudi clout in production shapes the world oil market, and its policies will weigh on the Feb. 1 meeting of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.

As Bush’s trip unfolded, U.S. dependence on Saudi Arabia was further illustrated when Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, Citigroup’s biggest individual investor, disclosed that he had put more money into the New York-based banking company. The increase was announced the same day Citigroup posted a $9.83 billion fourth-quarter net loss, the biggest in its 196-year history, tied to the mortgage meltdown.

Once the number one supplier of oil to the US they now rank 7th behind Canada and having duly purchased an arrogance to thwart Bush’s former swagger are disinterested in reclaiming the top spot.

Bush’s policies “have been catastrophic” for the Saudis, Chas Freeman (former US ambassador to the kingdom) says. He cites neglect of the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians, along with the Iraq invasion that has empowered Iran, thereby threatening the dominance of Sunni leaders in the region.

In answer to the Iranian threat, Bush offered to sell Saudi Arabia kits for satellite-guided smart bombs valued at about $123 million. The administration formally notified Congress of the deal during his visit.

Because of U.S. dependence, there is little Bush could do to prod the Saudis toward more democracy, a cornerstone of the president’s rhetorical policy toward the Middle East since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, when oil prices were around $28 a barrel.

Breaking ranks: US Military vs The White House

Nothing in my life has been more frustrating than being led by incompetent leaders. This first part of a two part article from Asia Times illustrates just how maddening it is for the military to be bound to the will of an incompetent leader and how criminal it is that our fighting men and women have suffered so at their hands. For those who believe the surge has worked read the article here and count how many of our sons and daughters have paid with their lives for this arrogant folly.

“Don’t let the quiet fool you,” a senior defense official says. “There’s still a huge chasm between how the White House views Iraq and how we [in the Pentagon] view Iraq. The White House would like to have you believe the ’surge’ has worked, that we somehow defeated the insurgency. That’s just ludicrous. There’s increasing quiet in Iraq, but that’s happened because of our shift in strategy – the ’surge’ had nothing to do with it.”

In part, the roots of the disagreement between the Pentagon and White House over what is really happening in Iraq is historical. Senior military officers contend that the seeming fall-off in in-country violence not only has nothing to do with the increase in US force levels, but that the dampening of the insurgency that took hold last summer could have and would have taken place much earlier, within months of America’s April 2003 occupation of Baghdad.

Moreover, these officers contend, the insurgency might not have put down roots in the country after the fall of Baghdad if it had not been for the White House and State Department – which undermined military efforts to strike deals with a number of Iraq’s most disaffected tribal leaders. These officers point out that the first contact between high-level Pentagon officials and the nascent insurgency took place in Amman, Jordan, in August of 2003 – but senior Bush administration officials killed the talks.

At the center of the dispute is the failure by Armani suited Washington bureaucrats to grasp the complexity and culture of the land they have invaded. Perhaps it is even a studied incompetence played out again and again by high ranking US officials from Donald Rumsfeld to Condoleeza Rice.

“We made the right contacts, we said the right things, we listened closely, we put a plan in place that would have saved a lot of time and trouble,” a senior Pentagon official says. “And every time we were ready to go forward, the White House said ‘no’.”

At the center of these early talks was a group of Iraqis led by Sheikh Talal al-Gaood, a Sunni businessman with close ties to Anbar’s tribal leaders. Gaood, who died of a heart ailment in March of 2006, was a passionate Iraqi patriot who feared growing al-Qaeda influence in his country. Speaking over coffee from his office in Amman in 2005, Gaood was enraged by the “endless mistakes” of the US leadership. “You [Americans] face a Wahhabi threat that you cannot even begin to fathom,” he said at the time, and he derided White House “propaganda” about the role of Syria in fueling the insurgency.

Gaood, looking every bit the former Ba’athist – complete with suspenders and Saddam Hussein-like mustache was particularly critical of what he called “the so-called counter-insurgency experts among Washington policymakers who think they know Iraq but don’t.” As he argued: “The guys who come through here, very educated, come in their brown robes and say they are going to Iraq to kill the Americans. They are not Syrians. They are Wahhabis. They are from Saudi Arabia. But if you talk to American officials, it is like they don’t exist.”

That might have been true for civilian policymakers, but it wasn’t true for the military – who were beginning to take heavy casualties from armed insurgents in Sunni areas.

Personally, I would hate to see a military coup but maybe it is time if not for a revolution then at the very least a mutiny.

Jon Stewart on Bush’s Saudi fishing expedition

Watch this first

Then read this account of the $145B economic stimulus proposed by Bush. Then read how average tax paying Americans subsidize the very wealthy while sticking it to the working stiff.
Then read about the $20B arms deal with the Saudis and remember that US helicopters are being shot down over Iraq and Afghanistan with US made surface to air missiles purchased from the Tamil Tigers with opium money by the Taliban and others from previous US arms deals.
Finally, read Robert Fisk’s excellent perspective on all the above