[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Gordon Chang: This is a WARNING SIGN about what's going on in China

Know Them By Their Fruits. Their Whole Lives devoted to uncovering the Crimes of the Undeclared Empire

He Asked ChatGPT One Question… Then It Got Disturbingly Prophetic

Lefties, Illegals, & Minorities Are Finally Experiencing "Consequence Culture"

US Bunker Buster's "Weak Spot" Revealed? China Finds Attack Tactic to ‘Stop’ Bomb That Hit Iran

"This is an EXTINCTION LEVEL EVENT" CIA MKULTRA Whistleblower sounding the alarm

Burn Brown Fat With Food

Cartels Moving to Canada For Fentanyl (And other reason)

Bees Benefit from Mushrooms, You Could Too

Top 11 SWAT Operations in History

Inside 'Return to the Land': The group making a whites-only community in Arkansas

Ana Kasparian: Epstein Cover-Up, Israel Strikes Gaza Church, & the Great American Political Shift

McDonald's McHire AI Bot Just Exposed The Personal Data Of 64 McMillion People

I think your EV is charged now. You can go ahead and unplug it.

Gen-Z Can't Answer the Most Basic Questions - OUR EDUCATION SYSTEM IS A JOKE.

Your car is spying on you, but here is how you can stop it.

The Real Reason Why Brigitte Macron Is So Worried...(Candace Owens)

Arsenic tested in food.

For the First Time! Russia Uses Italmas Drones to Attack Ukraine

Leaked Hospital Images Reveal Netanyahu’s TRUE Condition!

First Net-Negative Immigration in Decades

Lefties Losing It: Democrats go from bad to worse

"The Russia hoax is even worse than I thought" Journalist Matt Taibbi on CIA cover-up

Harvard is the Favorite School Red China's Leaders for their Kids

Lefties Losing It: If only there was a sign Hillary suffered from ‘psycho-emotional problems’

Apparently Hulk Hogan has died

10 Economic Facts That Nobody Can Deny

Obama May Be Tried for Treason !!!, 4772

Largest U.S. Power Grid Issues "Max Generation Alert"

Paul Joseph Watson: GO AD FREE This Doesn't End Well


Editorial
See other Editorial Articles

Title: How the Bush Administration Destabilized the the 'Arc of Instability'
Source: http://www.tbrnews.org/
URL Source: http://www.tbrnews.org/Archives/a2664.htm
Published: Apr 11, 2007
Author: Tom Engelhardt
Post Date: 2007-04-11 10:50:38 by robin
Keywords: None
Views: 74
Comments: 2

Six Crises in Search of an Author

How the Bush Administration Destabilized the "Arc of Instability"

By Tom Engelhardt

One night when I was in my teens, I found myself at a production of Pirandello's Six Characters in Search of an Author. I had never heard of the playwright or the play, nor had I seen a play performed in the round. The actors were dramatically entering and exiting in the aisles when, suddenly, a man stood up in the audience, proclaimed himself a seventh character in search of an author, and demanded the same attention as the other six. At the time, I assumed the unruly "seventh character" was just part of the play, even after he was summarily ejected from the theater.

Now, bear with me a moment here. Back in 2002-2003, officials in the Bush administration and their neocon supporters, retro-think-tank admirers, and allied media pundits, basking in all their Global War on Terror glory, were eager to talk about the region extending from North Africa through the Middle East, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the former SSRs of Central Asia right up to the Chinese border as an "arc of instability." That arc coincided with the energy heartlands of the planet and what was needed to "stabilize" it, to keep those energy supplies flowing freely (and in the right directions), was clear enough to them. The "last superpower," the greatest military force in history, would simply have to put its foot down and so bring to heel the "rogue" powers of the region. The geopolitical nerve would have to be mustered to stamp a massive "footprint" -- to use a Pentagon term of the time -- in the middle of that vast, valuable region. (Such a print was to be measured by military bases established.) Also needed was the nerve not just to lob a few cruise missiles in the direction of Baghdad, but to offer such an imposing demonstration of American shock-and-awe power that those "rogues" -- Iraq, Syria, Iran (Hezbollah, Hamas) -- would be cowed into submission, along with uppity U.S. allies like oil-rich Saudi Arabia.

It would, in fact, be necessary -- in another of those bluntly descriptive words of the era -- to "decapitate" resistant regimes. This would be the first order of business for the planet's lone "hyperpower," now that it had been psychologically mobilized by the attacks of September 11, 2001. After all, what other power on Earth was capable of keeping the uncivilized parts of the planet from descending into failed-state, all-against-all warfare and dragging us (and our energy supplies) down with them?

Mind you, on September 11, 2001, as those towers went down, that arc of instability wasn't exactly a paragon of… well, instability. Yes, on one end was Somalia, a failed state, and on the other, impoverished, rubble-strewn Afghanistan, largely Taliban-ruled (and al-Qaeda encamped); while in-between Saddam Hussein's Iraq was a severely weakened nation with a suffering populace, but the "arc" was wracked by no great wars, no huge surges of refugees, no striking levels of destruction. Not particularly pleasant autocracies, some of a fundamentalist religious nature, were the rule of the day. Oil flowed (at about $23 a barrel); the Israeli-Palestinian conflict simmered uncomfortably; and, all in all, it wasn't a pretty picture, nor a particularly democratic one, nor one in which, if you were an inhabitant of most of these lands, you could expect a fair share of justice or a stunningly good life.

Still, the arc of instability, as a name, was then more prediction than reality. And it was a prediction -- soon enough to become a self-fulfilling prophesy -- on which George Bush, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, and all those neocons in the Pentagon readily staked careers and reputations. As a crew, already dazzled by American military power and its potential uses, such a bet undoubtedly looked like a sure winner, like betting with the house in a three-card monte scheme. They would just give the arc what it needed -- a few intense doses of cruise-missile and B-1 bomber medicine, add in some high-tech military boots-on-the-ground, some night-vision goggled eyes in the desert, some Hellfire-missile-armed Predator drones overhead, and some "regime-change"-style injections of further instability. It was to be, as Andrew Bacevich has written, "an experiment in creative destruction."

First Afghanistan, then Iraq. Both pushovers. How could the mightiest force on the planet lose to such puny powers? As a start, you would wage a swift air-war/proxy-war/Special-Forces war/dollar-war -- CIA agents would arrive in friendly areas of Northern Afghanistan in late 2001 carrying suitcases stuffed with money -- in one of the most backward places on the planet. Your campaign would be against an ill-organized, ill-armed, ragtag enemy. You would follow that by thrusting into the soft, military underbelly of the Middle East and taking out the hollow armed forces of Saddam Hussein in a "cakewalk."

Next, with your bases set up in Afghanistan and Iraq on either side of Iran -- and Pakistan, also bordering Iran, in hand -- what would it take to run the increasingly unpopular mullahs who governed that land out of Tehran? Meanwhile, Syria, another weakened, wobbly state divided against itself, now hemmed in not only by militarily powerful Israel but American-occupied Iraq on the other would be a pushover. In each of these lands, you would soon enough end up with an American-friendly government, run by some figure like the Pentagon's favorite Iraqi exile Ahmed Chalabi; and, voilà! (okay, they wouldn't have used French), you would have a Middle East made safe for Israel and for American domination. You would, in short, have your allies in Europe and Japan as well as your possible future enemies, Russia and China, by the throat in an increasingly energy-starved world.

Certainly, many of the top officials of the Bush administration and their neocons allies, dreaming of just such an orderly, American-dominated "Greater Middle East," were ready to settle for a little chaos in the process. If a weakened Iraq broke into several parts; or, say, the oil-rich Shiite areas of Saudi Arabia happened to fall off that country, well, too bad. They'd deal.

Little did they know.

Long article, click for the rest

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: robin (#0)

Good results never occur from evil actions.

Dr.Ron Paul for President

Lod  posted on  2007-04-11   12:02:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: robin (#0)

Bernard Lewis was talking about an "Arc of Crisis" in the Middle East back in the 1970's. He wanted to foment instability. And he's still one of the chief advisers of Bush-Cheney.

To reason, indeed, he was not in the habit of attending. His mode of arguing, if it is to be so called, was one not uncommon among dull and stubborn persons, who are accustomed to be surrounded by their inferiors. He asserted a proposition; and, as often as wiser people ventured respectfully to show that it was erroneous, he asserted it again, in exactly the same words, and conceived that, by doing so, he at once disposed of all objections. - Macaulay, "History of England," Vol. 1, Chapter 6, on James II.

aristeides  posted on  2007-04-11   12:08:48 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]