The Thirty-Year Itch
For three decades, Washington's hawks
have pushed for the United States to seize control of the Persian
Gulf. Their time is now.
By Robert Dreyfuss
March/April 2003 Issue / Mother Jones
If you were to spin the globe and
look for real estate critical to building an American empire, your
first stop would have to be the Persian Gulf. The desert sands of
this region hold two of every three barrels of oil in the world --
Iraq's reserves alone are equal, by some estimates, to those of Russia,
the United States, China, and Mexico combined. For the past 30 years,
the Gulf has been in the crosshairs of an influential group of Washington
foreign-policy strategists, who believe that in order to ensure its
global dominance, the United States must seize control of the region
and its oil. Born during the energy crisis of the 1970s and refined
since then by a generation of policymakers, this approach is finding
its boldest expression yet in the Bush administration -- which, with
its plan to invade Iraq and install a regime beholden to Washington,
has moved closer than any of its predecessors to transforming the
Gulf into an American protectorate.
In the geopolitical vision driving
current U.S. policy toward Iraq, the key to national security is global
hegemony -- dominance over any and all potential rivals. To that end,
the United States must not only be able to project its military forces
anywhere, at any time. It must also control key resources, chief among
them oil -- and especially Gulf oil. To the hawks who now set the
tone at the White House and the Pentagon, the region is crucial not
simply for its share of the U.S. oil supply (other sources have become
more important over the years), but because it would allow the United
States to maintain a lock on the world's energy lifeline and potentially
deny access to its global competitors. The administration "believes
you have to control resources in order to have access to them," says
Chas Freeman, who served as U.S. ambassador to Saudi Arabia under
the first President Bush. "They are taken with the idea that the end
of the Cold War left the United States able to impose its will globally
-- and that those who have the ability to shape events with power
have the duty to do so. It's ideology."
(Mother Jones would
now like you to go to their site to continue reading this article)
© 2003 The Foundation for National
Progress
www.motherjones.com