WordType Designs
Driven To Distractions©
The Sound of One Hand Clapping©


A rchive Date
[ 31-08-2002 ]
Category
[ International Relations ]
sub-Categoy
[ U.S ]

      [http://www.canoe.ca/Columnists/margolis_aug4.html
                                                                                                             
      George Bush's new imperialism
      By ERIC MARGOLIS - Contributing Foreign Editor
      August 4, 2002
                                                                                                         
      The Bush administration's plan to invade Iraq and install a client regime in Baghdad may be popular in America, but to the outside world it increasingly recalls old-fashioned British imperialism.


      If administration hawks studied Iraq's gory history, they would learn it ranks among the most disastrous and tragic creations of Britain's colonial policy, and offers a grim reminder of what George Bush's planned "regime change" in Baghdad may bring.

      At the end of World War I, the victorious British and French fell like wolves on the rotting carcass of the defeated Ottoman Empire. After promising Arabs independence, Britain betrayed them, dividing the ex-Ottoman Mideast into weak states run from London.

      Oil had recently been discovered at either end of the Fertile Crescent: in the north around Mosul in Kurdish tribal territory, and in southern marshes bordering Iran. To secure oil for the Royal Navy, Britain created Iraq and put a puppet king, Faisal, on its throne. Faisal was to have been made king of Syria, but France managed to snatch Syria away from Britain.

      To form Iraq, Britain knitted together three utterly disparate, mutually hostile regions: Kurdish tribal lands; the Sunni Muslim region around Baghdad, then a small city with a predominantly Jewish and Christian population; and the Shia south. The result was an unstable, artificial, Frankenstein state - a Mideast Yugoslavia.

      In 1920, Iraqis rose in revolt against Britain but were crushed.

      The Royal Air Force routinely bombed, strafed, and even used poison gas against rebellious Kurdish and Shia tribesmen. Nineteen years later, King Ghazi I threatened to invade Kuwait - part of historic Iraq until detached by British oil imperialists. He died soon after in a mysterious car crash, the work, Iraqis said, of British intelligence.

      In 1941, Iraqis again rebelled against their British masters, but were crushed by RAF bombers.

      After World War II, London put a new king, Faisal II, on the throne. But real power was wielded by Britain's man in Baghdad, Prime Minister Nouri as-Said. The U.S. and Britain forced Iraq to join the anti-Soviet Baghdad Pact and sell its oil to the West at give-away prices.

      To prevent a coup, the small Iraqi Army was denied ammunition. British troops and the RAF kept Faisal in power. But in July, 1958, a colonel named Kassem convinced Nouri to allow his men a few rounds of  ammunition for training. Kassem marched out of Baghdad, turned around, marched back, and stormed the palace. King Faisal II was executed. Nouri as-Said tried to escape, disguised as a woman. He was captured by a mob, castrated and hanged from a lamppost. Kassem ordered British troops out of Iraq, and withdrew from the hated Baghdad Pact.

      Col. Kassem turned out to be a murderous lunatic, executing thousands of Iraqis and bombing the Kurds. He threatened to invade Kuwait and was only stopped when Britain massed troops in its protectorate.

      Five years later, Kassem was overthrown by Nasserite officers and machine-gunned on national TV. Col. Abdul Salam Aref took power, with discreet help from the CIA and British Intelligence, MI6.

      Three years later, Col. Aref was assassinated by a bomb in his helicopter. His brother, Col. Abdul Rahman, took power, but he was overthrown by a cabal of officers from the underground Baath party, led by Gen. Hassan al-Bakir. A young Baath party enforcer named Saddam Hussein played a significant role in the coup, and was said to have had links to the CIA and MI6.

      But the Baath regime then flirted with the Soviet Union, so the U.S., Britain, and Israel joined Iran in arming and funding Iraq's Kurds to rebel against Baghdad. In June, 1979, Saddam ousted Gen. al-Bakir. The lucky general became Iraq's only head of state to leave office alive.

      Saddam, the Arab Stalin, emerged as the most ruthless but also most effective ruler in Iraq's history. He used Iraq's oil revenues to massively modernize and industrialize his nation - and an iron fist to keep it united.

      Three months later, Saddam invaded Iran at the urging of the U.S., Britain and the Gulf Arabs in a foolish attempt to overthrow its new Islamic government and return the oil-rich nation to western control. Washington and London secretly financed and armed Iraq, providing technicians and materials to produce poison gas and germ warfare weapons. When Iraq's Kurds rebelled, Iraq followed Britain's example by using poison gas against them.

      Two years after the stalemated end of the Iraq-Iran war, Iraq invaded Kuwait, which had been stealing Iraqi oil by slant drilling and undermining Iraq's battered economy. Extremely ambiguous, if not purposely deceptive, U.S. diplomacy convinced Saddam he had a green light to invade and punish Kuwait.

      This he did, with disastrous consequences. Many Arabs believe Saddam fell right into a trap prepared for him by President George Bush Sr. U.S. bombing and ensuing sanctions transformed Iraq from the most modern Arab nation into the most backward.

      Iraq's leaders change, but one fact remains constant: this inherently unnatural, unstable, unmanageable nation has the Mideast's second largest reserves of oil and will thus remain the object of great power lust. Iraq's long agony seems fated to continue as the U.S. prepares to follow in Britain's imperial footsteps. 
                                                                                                             
      Eric can be reached by e-mail at
      margolis@foreigncorrespondent.com Letters to the editor should be sent to editor@sunpub.com or visit his home page.


      World Fact Book (CIA)]


Some pages may require Adobe Acrobat Reader



Copyright and Fair Use Information: The contents of this web site is protected by international copyright laws and may not be reproduced in any form or manner whatsoever, if for the purpose of resale or solicitation of a donation. The essays included here, may be reproduced only if: 1)They are not altered in any way; 2) reproductions must be accompanied by this copyright page ; and 3) it is given freely and without charge.
Fair use: The fair use of copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified in above sections, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright. In determining whether the use made of a work in any particular case is fair use the factors to be considered include : (1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether the use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes; (2) the nature of the copyrighted work; (3) the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole, and; (4) the effect of the use upon the potential market value of the copyrighted work.

Home | About Narrative? |Contact
Copyright © 2025. All Rights Reserved
HAG122125 (1998 -2026)