
#3
Political Experts' Analyses of Goals, Consequences of
US Strike on Iraq
Trud
October 8, 2002
[translation for personal use only]
Article by Andrey Stepanovich under rubric "The World Today":
"Awaiting H Hour: Political Scientists Argue About Goals and Consequences
of a US Strike on Iraq"
Everyone "is tired of waiting" for the US operation against Iraq;
officials in Washington and the mass media have been talking about it over and
over so persistently for so long. There also is no shortage of various
speculations regarding its goals and its possible consequences, both regional
and global.
This topic hasn't left the Russian politicians, political scientists and spin
doctors (PR specialists who promote a certain opinion to the masses)
indifferent. Among them are Aleksey Pushkov, Vyacheslav Nikonov, Sergey Markov,
Andrey Kokoshin, Aleksandr Dugin, Gleb Pavlovskiy, Mikhail Leontyev, Irina
Khakamada, Aleksey Mitrofanov and others.
A great number of them agree that a strike on Iraq is something that has been
decided, it will be swift, and it will lead to the elimination of Saddam
Hussein's regime. Whether we like it or not, this is a kind of force majeure
circumstance. The thesis also generates no special arguments that the ballyhoo
over the Iraqi threat in the form of weapons of mass destruction and the
dictatorial Baghdad regime is no more than a pretext for military intervention.
But the main motive is the fight for resources, for high-quality, inexpensive,
middle-eastern Iraqi (in this case) oil. Iraq possesses up to a fourth of world
oil reserves compared with 2.5 percent in the United States, which consumes
around a fourth of the liquid fuel produced in the world.
From this point on, the viewpoints diverge substantially. Some experts assume
that a certain renewed version of Desert Storm II will lead to the consolidation
of the "unipolarity of the world" and to a strengthening of the
domination of Pax Americana--a "New Roman Empire" under the Stars and
Stripes. Their logic is as follows: undivided US military-political, economic
and cultural hegemony will antagonize the diverse majority of mankind and create
a potential base for the consolidation of all those who are dissatisfied and for
a subsequent rebuff of US pretensions. "Anti-Americans of the world,
unite!" is, in their opinion, the motto of the not too distant future.
Others believe that the US action being prepared is an adventure and its
consequences have not been calculated. Moreover, it is doomed if not to military
failure, then to political failure, since its planners aren't taking into
account either the Iraqi factor--the capability and readiness of Saddam
Hussein's regime and his mass support for resistance, or the problem of finding
a viable replacement for him, or the negative position of the majority of the
international community (except for Great Britain), or the possible reaction of
the Arab-Muslim world, or the prospect of regional destabilization and a
powerful flare-up of terrorism.
Still others hold the opinion that nothing catastrophic will occur. The Iraqi
action allegedly is a reflection of US domestic policy projected onto
great-power ambitions on a global scale. Saddam's regime will be swept away, but
the United States won't occupy the country. It will take the oilfields in
northern and southern Iraq under its control. And this should be considered
inevitable.
With respect to what this might entail for Russia, the opinions again almost
coincide: nothing good. First of all, it will lead to a further
"shrinking" of Russia's geopolitical role, inasmuch as its prestige
and economic interests will suffer seriously.
Secondly, the United States is interested in cheap oil more than in new
allies and reliable partners, and control over the Iraqi oil reserves gives it
that opportunity. The world price on "black gold" will be determined
not by supply and demand, but by direction from Washington. Russia, whose
relative economic stability depends almost wholly on the export of liquid
hydrocarbon raw material, is awaited by tough times: sequestration of the
budget, default, a very acute crisis, a change of government, and much more
right down to its disintegration. Washington's promise to share the spoils of
war is taken very skeptically--it has too many unpaid Russian advances.
Thirdly, an Iraqi "blitzkrieg" certainly will whip up a new spiral
of an uncontrolled arms race, a nuclear one. Iran, the next target of Pentagon
strategists, will be striving for a nuclear bomb as a panacea for the sake of
preserving sovereignty. China, India and Pakistan will be swiftly building up
their missile-nuclear potential.
Fourthly, Russia may come closer to a united Europe on the common basis of
nonacceptance of US hegemonism, but this hardly will save the overall situation.
And the question automatically arises: Just what should be done? Experts
believe that the choice of options is severely limited by Russia's weakness,
both economic and military. Suggestions vary depending on political orientation.
Here are just a few: win time at any cost to build up forces; be reconciled
with the inevitability of a US empire, but in the process try to achieve the
status not of an outlying US province, but at least of a junior partner; resort
to proud isolationism; finally, bargain with the Americans--we offer not to veto
the ultimatum to Iraq in the UN Security Council, and they offer us something
from the Iraqi petroleum pie. The following also was said: let's help the United
States put an end to the dictatorial regime in Baghdad. Although it seemingly
has no traditional weapons of mass destruction, or very few, Baghdad is
producing a new type, suicidal kamikazes, and this is a serious threat to
everyone...
The most cautious and moderate still propose to come to an agreement with the
Americans, inasmuch as we nevertheless are incapable of preventing a strike. In
the final account, let them carry out this action with unpredictable
consequences, but then they also will have to bear full responsibility by
themselves.
One other rather original opinion was heard. A wide-scale military campaign
like the 1991 Desert Storm hardly is possible nowadays. Washington will prefer
to resort rather to a surgical, sophisticated, multiple-move special operation,
and this requires superb coordination of a broad set of forces and assets. But
so many in the world and even in the United States itself are interested in
having such an operation fail that trouble in some one element of it at some
stage in it and a subsequent fiasco become almost inevitable. One only has to
wait for H Hour; very little time is left...
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