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7/4/2004 Part 1 of a Three
Part Series
Michael Moore and Richard Perle Combine Forces:
Who Really Wants to Invade Saudi Arabia, and Why?
By
Tanya C. Hsu
Senior Political Analyst & Director of Program Development
Institute for Research: Middle East PolicyHijacking planes, terrorizing innocent people and shedding blood,
constitute a form of injustice that cannot be tolerated by Islam, which views them as
gross crimes and sinful acts
Any Muslim who is aware of his teachings of his religion
and who adheres to the directives of the Qur'an and the Sunn'ah will never
involve himself in such acts because they will invoke the anger of God Almighty and lead
to harm and corruption on earth. Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia and Chairman of the
Senior Ulema, Sheikh Abdul-Aziz �lush, Sept. 15, 2001
Michael Moore's new film Fahrenheit 9/11 has done a tremendous favor for
some proponents of a war upon the Arabian Peninsula. The film achieves what endless pages
of conservative think-tank studies and panel discussions, hours of PR time and books can
not: spill gasoline on the anti-Saudi sparks already ignited within the United States.
Moore's film lambastes the Saudis not only for their business relationships but also for
leaving the US after the attacks of September 11th 2001 as did other non-Saudi officials
on the same day when specific flights were permitted. The overwhelming popularity of this
documentary takes the anti-Saudi message to a whole new market. It is the latest
manifestation of a rationale for war that could finally execute a long-term plan to invade
and occupy the Kingdom. In spite of its progressive producer and target audience,
Fahrenheit 9/11 falls lock-step in line with the stated agenda of
neoconservative hawks: rid Arabia of the House of Saud thereby granting the US and allies
full access to the Middle East's biggest prize.
There is a growing assumption on the part of members of the US Congress, US-Saudi
diplomats, and the American public that the Bush administration is making a
turnaround in US policy towards the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia because of
neo-conservative and domestic interest group pressure. Those opposed to the current
administration accuse the White House of maintaining ties to an enemy of America in
exchange for lucrative business deals. In contrast, those who support ties with Saudi
Arabia maintain that the US has no intention of severing relations with a regional
stabilizing force and with long term friends in the House of Saud. Who is correct?
Neither.
The US has not had wholly friendly intentions towards the Kingdom for the past
30 years. Any appearance of such is only the visible veneer of real US military policy.
Declassified documents reveal that there has been a constant drumbeat to invade Saudi
Arabia that has sounded behind the closed doors of our government. The Pentagon, for three
decades, has formulated and updated secret plans to seize Saudi oil wells and rid the
Kingdom of the ruling House of Saud. This is not only a neo-conservative cabal. Time and
again plans have been made for an invasion of Saudi Arabia for a larger purpose: US
control of the global oil supply thereby dominating global economic markets.
The most recent wave of charges that Saudi Arabia supports, condones, and aids terrorism
signify a secondary and more public attempt to gain support to finally execute a thirty
year old plan to occupy Saudi Arabia. Other regional players' objectives, (securing
oil supplies; the rationale of a "war on terror") may add synergy and an
unstoppable impetus for an American invasion.
This essay discloses and evaluates the motives and actions of those behind the new drive
to occupy Saudi oil fields.
Classified Plans Brought To Light
In 1973, the Nixon administration described a plan of attack against Saudi Arabia to seize
its oil fields in a classified Joint Intelligence Report entitled UK Eyes
Alpha. British MI5 and MI6 were informed, and under British National Archive rules
the document was declassified in December of 2003. The oil embargo had been over for only
three weeks but Eyes Alpha suggested that the US could guarantee
sufficient oil supplies for themselves and their allies by taking the oil fields in Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait, and the Gulf State of Abu Dhabi. It followed that
pre-emptive action would be considered, and that two brigades could seize the
Saudi oilfields and one brigade each could take Kuwait and Abu Dhabi.
In February of 1975 the London Sunday Times revealed
information from a leaked and classified US Department of Defense plan. The plan, drawn up
by the Pentagon, was code named Dhahran Option Four and provided for an
invasion of the world's largest oil reserves, namely Saudi Arabia. See exhibit #1
Exhibit 1 The Take-Over Plan
(Source: London Sunday Times, February 1975, retouched by IRmep)
Also in 1975, Robert Tucker, US intelligence and military analyst, wrote an article for
Commentary magazine, owned by the Jewish American Committee, entitled
Oil: The Issue of American Intervention. Tucker stated that, Without
intervention there is a distinct possibility of an economic and political disaster bearing
resemblance to the disaster of 1930s
The Arab shoreline of the Gulf is a new
El Dorado waiting for its conquistadors. And this was followed in February of the
same year by an article in Harper's Magazine by a Pentagon analyst using a pseudonym,
Miles Ignotus, emphasizing the need for the US to seize Saudi oilfields, installations and
airports entitled Seizing Arab Oil. According to James Akins, former US diplomat,
the author was probably Henry Kissinger, Secretary of State at the time. Kissinger has
neither confirmed nor ever denied the charge.
Further, in August of 1975, a report entitled, Oil Fields as Military Objectives: A
Feasibility Study, was produced for the Committee on Foreign Relations. In this
report, the CRS stated that potential targets for the US included Saudi Arabia, Kuwait,
Venezuela, Libya, and Nigeria. Analysis indicates
[that military forces of
OPEC countries were] quantitatively and qualitatively inferior [and] could be swiftly
crushed.
The real premise of an attack against the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has been around since
the Cold War. The idea was, however, revived under the aegis of a new war against
terrorism on the charge of that the Saudi state supported such against the west. One
nexus of this drive is Richard Perle.
Neo-conservative Designs on Saudi Arabia
Richard Perle is an outspoken critic of any Americans doing business with the Kingdom,
despite his own attempt to secure $100 million in Saudi investment for his private venture
capital firm. His ill-fated attempt to become a power-broker with one foot on in the door
of the US Defense Policy board of the Department of Defense and another foot in the door
of Trimeme capital investments is well documented.
He has since become more hard-line, telling the National Review, I think it's a
disgrace. The Saudis are a major source of the problem we face with terrorism.
(Perle had to resign from the Defense Policy Board when his secret and extortive
fundraising meetings with Saudi Arabian businessmen became public.)
Perle's efforts to rearrange the dynamics of the region, including Saudi Arabia, have gone
on for many years. Incoming Israeli Likud Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu asked Perle to
draft a regional strategy paper for Israel. The Institute for Advanced Strategic &
Political Studies, a think tank based in Washington DC and Jerusalem published the
completed paper, A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm ,
emphasized the need to overturn the Oslo Accords and Middle East peace process. It
demanded Chairman Yasser Arafat be blamed for every act of Palestinian terror; required
the overthrow of Saddam Hussein and the Ba'athist regime in Iraq and Syria; and the
force of democracy foisted upon the entire Arab world plus Iran. One senior Israeli
intelligence officer stated the goal was to make Israel the dominant power in the region
and expel the Palestinians. Perle's efforts to neutralize international funding for the
Palestinian resistance and support of Palestinians have driven his policy recommendations
ever since.
Another author of A Clean Break was David Wurmser. In September of 2003
Wurmser was moved to the US State Department to work directly under Vice President Dick
Cheney and his Chief of Staff Lewis Libby. David Wurmser's wife, Meyrav, ran MEMRI
(Middle East Media Research Institute) alongside Colonel Yigal Carmon, of Israeli Army
Intelligence. MEMRI specializes
in selective retrieval, searching and translating especially plucked Arab language
documents that confirm MEMRI's bias that the Arab world despises the West. Meyrav Wurmser
received her doctorate at George Washington University on the life of Vladimir Jabotinsky,
founder of Revisionist Zionism and declared fascist, and hero of Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon and the Likud Party.
Saudi Arabia was again declared an enemy of the United States on July 10th, 2002, when
RAND Corporation's Laurent Murawiec gave a PowerPoint presentation to the Defense
Policy Board at the invitation of Perle Like Meyrav Wurmser, Murawiec is also from George
Washington University and listed as a past faculty member. He was also a follower of the
Lyndon LaRouche cultist organization. This group indoctrinates its members to abandon
their homes because family values are really immoral, according to those who
left the group. (Lyndon LaRouche is a convicted felon, conspiracy theorist and UFO
believer.)
Entitled Taking Saudi Out Of Arabia the PowerPoint presentation states
Saudi Arabia the strategic pivot and declared that the Kingdom is an enemy of
the USA. It advocated the US seize the Kingdom and its oil fields, invade Mecca and
Medina, confiscate Saudi Arabian financial assets unless the Kingdom stop supporting
anti-Western terrorist activities.
Saudi Arabia was declared as the kernel of evil, the prime mover, the most dangerous
opponent in the Middle East. Murawiec claimed, Since independence, wars have
been the principal output of the Arab world and that plot, riot, murder, coup
are the only available means to bring about change
Violence is politics, politics is
violence. This culture of violence is the prime enabler of terrorism. Terror as an
accepted, legitimate means of carrying out politics has been incubated for 30
years
James Akins explained the overall plans thusly: It'll be
easier once we have Iraq. Kuwait, we already have. Qatar and Bahrain too. So it's
only Saudi Arabia we're talking about, and the United Arab Emirates falls into
place.
The connections between individuals pressing for a US invasion of Saudi Arabia run deep.
Richard Perle's lifelong mentor was the RAND corporation's late Albert
Wohlstetter, the grandfather of neo-conservative analysts. Wohlstetter also was a Ahmed
Chalabi's classmate at the University of Chicago. Chalabi, the leader of the Iraqi
National Congress and the protagonist of the information provided to the US government
regarding the thus far non-existent Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, is an indicted
criminal in Jordan where he has been sentenced to more than 20 years' hard labor for
currency manipulation and embezzlement through Jordanian Petra Bank.
The analytical and populist groundswell of denunciation against Saudi Arabia as a state
sponsor of terrorism from progressive and conservative circles alike may culminate in an
invasion sooner rather than later. Supporters within the current US administration can use
this unity to execute another blueprint" for US policy. It can follow as easily
as Saddam Hussein's imminent threat towards America and Iraq's WMDs
served as the principle rationale for the US invasion of Iraq.
Target Saudi Arabia: Taking the Case from Think Tank to Theater
In reality there has been no hard evidence linking Saudi Arabian leaders and officials to
terrorism, little evidence of Saudi subjects playing a mindful role, and far less
financial ties to terrorism than could be found in most nations with a banking system. In
fact, the US State Department lists the Netherlands, Switzerland, Italy, Germany,
Australia and indeed the United States itself as having Al Queda financial ties and
connections. However, facts may not be enough to stem rising anti-Saudi sentiment among
policy makers and average Americans.
The Murawiec PowerPoint indictment continued, stating that Saudi Arabia is [a]n
instable group:
Wahhabism loathes modernity, capitalism, human rights, religious
freedom, democracy, republics, an open society and that Wahhabism is spreading
world-wide [sic] based upon Iran's Revolution led by Shi'ite Ayatollah
Khomeini; that Wahhabism moves from Islam's lunatic fringe, and that
there was a [s]hift from pragmatic oil policy to promotion of radical Islam
.
[Saudi Arabians are] treasurers of radical, fundamentalist, terrorist groups.
Saudi Arabia is then charged with being the chief vector of the Arab crisis
active at every level of the terror chain
[it] supports [US] enemies [and has]
virulent hatred against US
. There is an Arabia but it need not be
Saudi
[US must] stop any funding and support for any fundamentalist
madrasa, mosque, ulama, predicator anywhere in the world
Dismantle, ban all the
kingdom's Islamic charities, confiscate their assets... [and] What the
House of Saud holds dear can be targeted Oil...the Holy Places
Saudi Arabia
[is] the strategic pivot.
Were these presentations not heard by top-level Bush administration officials they would
be dismissed as simplistic absurdity. However, the sparks of a mass movement to demonize
Saudi Arabia had already begun to ignite, and on June 6th 2002 the right wing Hudson
Institute held a seminar called Discourses on Democracy: Saudi Arabia, Friend or
Foe?, Laurent Murewiec and Richard Perle in attendance.
Of even further interest is the ironic and direct link between Richard Perle and
terrorism. A recent fundraiser in support of the victims of the Iranian earthquake in Bam,
sponsored by the Mujahedin-e-Khalq, asked Richard Perle to be their keynote speaker.
Despite rejections by other groups to speak at the event, based upon the US state
department's official conclusion that the MEK is an officially designated
foreign terrorist organization, Richard Perle knew of the designation, ignored
it, and was happy to oblige and raise monies - monies which were immediately seized after
the event by U.S. Treasury agents. The MEK is the same terrorist organization that
attempted to assassinate Richard Nixon in 1972.
Two weeks after the PowerPoint presentation to the Pentagon's Defense Policy Board,
the American Enterprise Institute held yet another seminar by Dore Gold, former UN
Ambassador from Israel to promote his new book, Hatred's Kingdom: How Saudi
Arabia Supports the New Global Terrorism. Having never visited the country, Gold has
been promoted on broadcast television networks as an expert on Saudi Arabia
when not introduced as "an advisor of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon".
Gold claims that the al-Haramain group has channeled massive funding to Al-Qaeda whilst
omitting that Saudi Arabia shut down the organization and froze its assets. Gold's
strongest claim is an Israeli document claiming funds to Hamas come from Saudi Arabia.
Hamas has strongly denied the charge of any Saudi government involvement and Saudi Arabia
also dismissed the charges as false. Gold uses the book to promote the
Netanyahu/Perle/Bush agenda to pursue Saudi Arabia far more aggressively if Middle
Eastern security is to be protected and argues that Israel has only a minor
role in Al-Qaeda related acts of terrorism because Saudi Arabia is to blame for
funding the global jihad of Al Qaeda. Gold then testified before the United
States' Congress about the inherent evil of Saudi Arabia. Yet throughout the book
Gold only confirms that terrorism connections come from foreigners who infiltrate the
country, and non-Saudi governments. The book provides no proof of official or unofficial
support.
Hudson Institute co-founder and neoconservative Max Singer wrote a paper sent to the
Pentagon's Office of Net Assessment in May 2002 urging the outside break up of Saudi
Arabia. On Oct 7th 2003 fellow arch conservative William Kristol, editor of Weekly
Standard, stated that he was upset that the US had not gone beyond the war on Iraq to the
next regime change of the next horrible Middle East dictator
Bashar Assad of Syria.
Before publication of his book Sleeping With The Devil , Robert Baer, ex-CIA
officer, was ordered by the CIA to remove multiple passages claiming special CIA knowledge
of Saudi royals having funneled money to Al Qaeda for terrorist funding, assassination
plots, and even Chechen rebels. He asserts that Saudi Arabia is a powder keg waiting
to explode, "the royal family is corrupt , hanging on
by a thread and as violent and vengeful as any Mafia family. Baer,
filled with loathing towards the Saudis, relies upon a tacit, yet rejected CIA stamp of
approval, but also shows little hard evidence. Baer refused to comply with the CIA's
request just [to] defy them. The CIA is considering filing a lawsuit against
Baer, who, like Gold, has also never personally visited Saudi Arabia.
Another author who has made the best-seller list is Gerald Posner, who wrote Why
America Slept which implicates Osama bin Laden and the Saudi government. In
Posner's opinion the rulers have been paying hush money to bin Laden for years in
order to prevent terrorist attacks upon the Kingdom. One might consider it strange that
there have been multiple fatal attacks upon civilians in Saudi Arabia if bin Laden
receives such bribes. And how was Posner able to create a book with such a detailed
indictment within a few months when US intelligence has taken years? Posner presents no
clarifications.
The US government itself not only unknowingly harbored and sponsored terrorists (9/11
Al-Qaeda members, Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation, Mujahedin-e-Khalq [MEK], IRA, etc.) it
consciously negotiated with Iranian terrorist groups to secure US troop safety from attack
in Iraq from Iranians in exchange for Iraqi weapons. Up until 2001 and since the
mid-nineties the US dealt directly with the Taliban for oil pipeline rights, agreeing to
pay the Taliban tax on every one of the million cubic feet of fuel that would have passed
through Afghanistan daily. Vice President Dick Cheney, Halliburton CEO at the time,
stated, Occasionally we have to operate in places where, all things considered, one
would not normally choose to go. But we go where the business is." During this
timeframe Hamid Karzai was the Taliban's deputy foreign minister and a former UNOCAL
consultant (UNOCAL leading these negotiations along with Paul Wolfowitz aide Zalmay
Khalilzad).
On November 9th 2003 Israel confirmed that it had failed in secret negotiations with
Hezbollah, sleeping with their own devil. (In January 2004 the Israeli negotiations with
their designated terrorist group Hezbollah bore fruit, when a prisoner swap became
actuality.) Gerald Posner writes in his book that terrorists had been set up by the US
posing as Saudi interrogators, releasing a flood of information under excess cruelty. This
charge would mean that the US was in violation of international law by using torture on
terror suspects.
Whatever inconsistencies exist between US public relations and the "war on
terror", the efforts to tie the Saudi government or "Saudis" in general to
terrorism is taking effect. Merit or evidence is not the issue. Passion and mobilization
is. The movie Fahrenheit 9/11, true to its title, turns up the heat through an
entirely new American audience: Democrats and Progressives.
The Approaching Decision
On June 25, 2004, Michael Moore's film, "Fahrenheit 9/11" opened to 500 screens
and insatiable crowds. The film's message to audiences is clear and simple: the US-Saudi
relationship must end. However, Americans should take time to go beyond the film, books,
and talk-show pundits to re-examine the complicated history between the US and Saudi
Arabia and real motives of parties pushing for war. By understanding the motives and
histories of the driving personalities new and old, we can uncover and more fully
comprehend a growing case for war in Arabia.
Americans will soon be asked to make a decision about whether invasion is the proper
course for American policy. But unlike the build up to a war in Iraq, an informed decision
will serve America in a way that hidden plans, rationales and one-sided messages on sale
at the box-office cannot.
Coming in Part Two: The History of Fundamentalism
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