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  • Ramping Up Afghanistan War To Control Caspian Oil And Gas Transport

    RAMPING UP AFGHANISTAN WAR TO CONTROL CASPIAN OIL AND GAS TRANSPORT ROUTES
    By Jerry Mazza

    Online Journal
    Dec 8, 2009, 00:28

    The 800-pound gorilla standing in the auditorium at West Point is
    still waiting for an answer to why Obama made his surge-speech for
    30,000 more troops and $30 billion to pay for them. That gorilla
    wonders "why" Obama pitched so hard for the US to stay and surge
    through Afghanistan and Pakistan. The reasons given were that the
    Afghanistan Taliban and Al Qaeda led by Osama bin Laden were the
    people that attacked us on 9/11, which was an iteration of George W.

    Bush's reasons for the War on Terror. They are as phony now as the
    day Bush promised to smoke out Bin Laden.

    But, here are Obama's actual words, pointed out by Christopher Bollyn
    on page 2 of his article, Why Afghanistan?

    "1. I am convinced that our security is at stake in Afghanistan and
    Pakistan. This is the epicenter of the violent extremism practiced
    by al-Qaeda. It is from here that we were attacked on 9/11, and it
    is from here that new attacks are being plotted as I speak.

    "2. It is important to recall why America and our allies were compelled
    to fight a war in Afghanistan in the first place. We did not ask for
    this fight. On September 11, 2001, 19 men hijacked four airplanes
    and used them murder nearly 3,000 people.

    "3: If I did not think that the security of the United States and
    the safety of the American people were at stake in Afghanistan,
    I would gladly order every single one of our troops home tomorrow."

    Also, as early as Oct. 14, 2001, a month and three days after 9/11,
    Bollyn wrote in The Great Game - The War For Caspian Oil And Gas:
    "President Bush's 'crusade' against the Taliban of Afghanistan has
    more to do with control of the immense oil and gas resources of the
    Caspian Basin than it does with 'rooting out terrorism.'

    "Once again an American president from the Bush family is leading
    Americans down an oil-rich Middle Eastern warpath against 'enemies
    of freedom and democracy.'

    "President George W. Bush, whose family is well connected to oil and
    energy companies, has called for an international crusade against
    Islamic terrorists, who he says hate Americans simply because we are
    'the brightest beacon of freedom.'

    "The focus on religion-based terrorism serves to conceal important
    aspects of the Central Asian conflict. President Bush's noble rhetoric
    about fighting for justice and democracy is masking a less noble
    struggle for control of an estimated $5 trillion of oil and gas
    resources from the Caspian Basin.

    Bollyn goes on to explain that the elder Bush's Desert Storm
    military campaign in 1991 yielded secure access to the huge Rumaila
    oil field of southern Iraq. It was made to happen by expanding the
    boundaries of Kuwait after the war. This enabled Kuwait, the former
    British protectorate and home to American and British oil companies'
    investments, to double its prewar oil output . . ." Bollyn got it
    down cold even then.

    He told how the infamous Enron, the now bankrupt Texas gas and energy
    company, along with Amoco, British Petroleum, Chevron, Exxon Mobil and
    Unocal were wrapped in a cabal to suck up the multi-billion dollar
    reserves of Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and Terkmenistan, three freshly
    independent Soviet republics bordering the Caspian Sea. The American
    negotiators included the usual suspects, James Baker, Brent Snowcroft,
    Dick Cheney, and Jon Sununu.

    Bollyn also pointed out that Turkmenistan and Azerbijan had close ties
    to Israeli interests and intelligence. In Turkmenistan, the ex-intel
    agent, and main go-to for Israeli was Yosef A. Maiman, president of
    Merhav Group of Israel. He was the anointed negotiator and policy maker
    tasked to "develop" energy resources there. And that holds to this day.

    Back then, Maiman also mentioned to the Wall Street Journal his role
    was to further the "geopolitical goals of both the US and Israel
    in Central Asia. We are doing what US and Israeli policy could not
    achieve, controlling the transport route is controlling the product."

    James Dorion, an energy expert, had written as early as September 10,
    2001, in Oil & Gas Journal, "Those that control the oil routes out
    of Central Asia will impact all future direction and quantities of
    flow and the distribution of revenues from new production." Could it
    be any clearer, given the US oil and gas interests in the Caspian
    Basin that Afghanistan was to be reined in, especially when Iran,
    which paralleled it north to south was not a pipeline option, giving
    its mutual hostilities with the US.

    Enron, Bush's number one campaign contributor in 2000, ran a
    feasibility study on the Trans-Caspian-gas pipeline, price-tag $2.5
    billion, to be built as per a joint venture agreement penned and signed
    in February 1999 by Turkmenistan and US companies, Bechtel and GE
    Capital Services, with Maiman as the intermediary, his "cut" or stake
    in the pipeline not to be discussed, as noted in Bollyn's article.

    Everything seemed ready to go, including a Washington lobby firm, until
    the war in Afghanistan led the various parties to withdraw. The terrain
    was too politically unstable to begin a huge project. In fact, members
    of the Taliban were brought to Texas in 1999 to talk with the oilmen,
    but the bearded ones with their turbans and robes and general toughness
    caused the deal, but not the idea, to be put on ice. Another route
    to controlling Afghanistan would need to be taken. It all percolated,
    the thought of all that gas and oil and money flowing like an endless
    gift from the gods. But the answer had been found. And it exploded
    like two airliners into the World Trade Towers on 9/11/2001.

    In a matter of days, pictures of 19 Muslim hijackers of the planes
    were plucked magically out of FBI files, which Robert Mueller claimed
    in 2002 could not really be proven to be the perpetrators. But the
    truth died first on that awful day and it still struggles to breathe,
    going on nine years later, that the catastrophe was an "inside job."

    Within days, without any real investigation, the War on Terror was
    declared, and a gung-ho George W. Bush and Company sent the US military
    to "bomb Afghanistan back to the Stone Age" and "smoke out Osama."

    Unfortunately, the false-flag op worked so well at first in the US and
    Afghanistan that it actually set the Taliban back for a while. That
    is, until, Bush & Company were distracted by Saddam Hussein and his
    mythic Weapons of Mass Destruction, about to create another 9/11-like
    mushroom cloud on the horizon. But creating a second front was a huge
    military mistake, even for all the possibilities of controlling Iraq's
    huge supply of sweet and inexpensive crude. As soon as the US dove in
    with "shock and awe" into Iraq, the Taliban began a resurgence that
    continues to this day. Actually, Al Qaeda members in Afghanistan number
    only about 100 today. So the need to ramp up Al Qaeda terror-talk
    has become essential.

    Yet none of this, none of this, had or has to do with bringing
    democracy or stability to Afghanistan, or ridding Iraq of a despot we
    originally placed there, Saddam Hussein. It was all about controlling
    oil and gas, and vast amounts of money to be made if the US could
    master the Middle East's geopolitical landscape. Unfortunately, or
    fortunately, according to one's politics, we bit off far more than we
    could chew, and received much more blowback than we imagined, both in
    Iraq and, subsequently, in Afghanistan. This brings us back to today,
    and that 800-pound gorilla sitting in the darkened, silent auditorium
    of West Point, mumbling to himself.

    What he's repeating to himself is that US bases align with the proposed
    pipeline that will start at the Caspian Basin and go south down through
    Afghanistan to Pakistan and to ports at the Indian Ocean where the
    oil can be shipped east to India and China. What's more, the Afghan
    war has been amped up to include Pakistan, which is presently being
    bombed by missile-spitting, remote-guided drones on select targets
    or individuals who don't agree with our efforts there, but mainly
    wiping out innocent civilians.

    In fact, Scott Shane wrote in the NY Times, CIA To Expand Use of Drones
    in Pakistan, that "Two weeks ago in Pakistan, Central Intelligence
    Agency sharpshooters killed eight people suspected of being militants
    of the Taliban and Al Qaeda, and wounded two others in a compound
    that was said to be used for terrorist training.

    Skip to next paragraph

    "Then, the job in North Waziristan done, the C.I.A. officers could head
    home from the agency's Langley, Va., headquarters [itals mine], facing
    only the hazards of the area's famously snarled suburban traffic.

    "It was only the latest strike by the agency's covert program to
    kill operatives of Al Qaeda, the Taliban and their allies using
    Hellfire missiles fired from Predator aircraft controlled from half
    a world away."

    Shane stated that "The White House has authorized an expansion of
    the C.I.A.'s drone program in Pakistan's lawless tribal areas,
    officials said this week, to parallel the president's decision,
    announced Tuesday, to send 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan. American
    officials are talking with Pakistan about the possibility of striking
    in Baluchistan for the first time -- a controversial move since it
    is outside the tribal areas -- because that is where Afghan Taliban
    leaders are believed to hide."

    As repugnant as depersonalizing killing is, the likelihood of killing
    more innocents is even greater and more repugnant. This is a new low,
    both militarily and morally, even for the CIA. Yet it is regarded by
    anti-terror "experts" as a "resounding success."

    Shane writes, "About 80 missile attacks from drones in less than two
    years have killed 'more than 400' enemy fighters . . . offering a
    number lower than most estimates but in the same range."

    The fact is, the latest model, the MQ-9 Reaper can fly at 50,000 feet
    with a maximum internal payload of 800 pounds and external payload
    more than 3,000 pounds, carrying up to four Hellfire II anti-armor
    missiles and two laser-guided bombs. That's a lot of death, which
    could have been used in earlier drone incarnations to create part of
    911's havoc. And there's more to come.

    Additionally the infamous Blackwater, now called Xe, is at work for the
    CIA, which is spearheading the covert Pakistan war, and this all costs
    money, big money. So, fortunately, the agency still has the opium crop
    to cover the shortfalls in budget or cash, and the so-called 2010-11
    pull-out mandate is already up in smoke, according to Secretary of
    Defense Robert Gates. Thus, the real reasons for this surge have
    to be McChrystal clear even to a blind man or Congress. The hope
    is that seeing-eye dogs like Bollyn, now living in writer's exile,
    and Craig Murray, the UK's former ambassador to Uzbekistan, and even
    my humble self and other writers, can be of assistance.

    Murray, in a recent chilling article, not only asserted that the
    CIA sent people to be 'raped with broken bottles' in Uzbekistan in
    order to obtain whatever confessions for "intelligence" they needed
    to justify their twisted actions. On the third page of the story,
    regarding US troop presence, the subhead reads, "It's The Pipeline,
    Stupid," and Murray asserts "that the primary motivation for US and
    British military involvement in central Asia has to do with large
    natural gas deposits in Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. As evidence,
    he points to the plans to build a natural gas pipeline through
    Afghanistan that would allow Western oil companies to avoid Russia
    and Iran when transporting oil and natural gas out of the region.

    Murray alleged that in the late 1990s the Uzbek ambassador to the
    US met with then-Texas Governor George W. Bush to discuss a pipeline
    for the region, and out of that meeting came agreements that would see
    Texas-based Enron gain the rights to Uzbekistan's natural gas deposits,
    while oil company Unocal worked on developing the Trans-Afghanistan
    pipeline.

    He points out, as Bollyn and I have in previous articles, that "The
    consultant who was organizing this for Unocal was a certain Mr.

    Karzai, who is now 'president of Afghanistan . . ."

    Murray goes on to say that the motive in ramping up "the threat of
    Islamic terrorism in Uzbekistan through forced confessions was to
    ensure the country remained on-side in the war on terror, so that
    the pipeline could be built."

    Murray adds, "There are designs of this pipeline, and if you look at
    the deployment of US forces in Afghanistan, as against other NATO
    country forces in Afghanistan, you'll see that undoubtedly the US
    forces are positioned to guard the pipeline route. It's what it's
    about. It's about money, it's about oil, it's not about democracy."

    As he tells us, " The Trans-Afghanistan Pipeline is slated to be
    completed in 2014, with $7.6 billion in funding from the Asian
    Development Bank."

    Murray was let go from his post as ambassador in 2004, following
    his first public allegations that the British government relied on
    torture in Uzbekistan for intelligence.

    Let the high-minded causes of bringing peace, democracy, stability or
    anything but pain and pillage to Afghanistan and Pakistan be brought
    down like flags to half mast, and let us realize there are far baser
    motives of wealth, power, and geopolitical control rising. It's not
    really rocket science and shouldn't be, especially for a Harvard
    constitutional lawyer, yes, our own Barrack Obama, President for
    Change.

    That said, maybe the 800-pound gorilla in the room can get a decent
    night's sleep.

    Jerry Mazza is a freelance writer living in New York City. Reach him
    at [email protected]. His new book, "State Of Shock: Poems from 9/11
    on" is available at www.jerrymazza.com, Amazon or Barnesandnoble.com.
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