¶ … American invasion of Iraq: the official position meted out by the Bush administration on the one hand, and the position most scholars and foreign policy analysts support on the other. The latter position is that invading Iraq served distinct foreign policy goals that were not being honestly articulated but which nevertheless underwrote official decisions. Within these two broad camps are a number of more specific explanations as to why the United States invaded Iraq, and the most salient of which was the need to maintain American political and fiscal hegemony.
At the time of the public announcement to invade Iraq in March of 2003, President Bush offered the following three reasons: "to disarm Iraq of weapons of mass destruction, to end Saddam's support of terrorism, and to free the Iraqi people," (cited by Kramer and Thrall 1). All three of these reasons sounded good on paper and helped rally some initial popular and Congressional support. Indeed, Hussain "had continued to sponsor terrorism, had over the years invaded or attacked four of his neighbors, and had killed tens of thousands of his own people," (Hanson). However, less than a year after Bush made his public assertion coupled with his "axis of evil" rhetoric, evidence emerged to show that none of these three reasons could have been the real purpose for invading Iraq. No connection between Saddam Hussain and Al Qaeda could be found, no WMDs were found, and the United States certainly did not seem as altruistic about the Iraqi people as Bush had claimed. Certainly there was no connection between the events of September 11 and Iraq. September 11 did present, on a silver platter, a justification for invading Iraq. The September 11 terrorist attacks offered a "window of opportunity" for aggression "without public censure," a reason to invade even if a spurious one (Kramer and Thrall 6). The invasion of Iraq may have occurred even if September 11 did not, but it might have been harder to garner support for a second Gulf War if the fear of terrorism and weapons of mass destruction had not been at the peak levels they were in the aftermath of September 11.
If none of the "official" reasons for invading Iraq were true, then the deeper reasons were ostensibly illegitimate, if not wholly sinister. A leaked secret memorandum, known as the Downing Street Memo, which was written to senior British intelligence and military officials including the Defense Secretary, indicated that Washington had for some time viewed a war in Iraq as "inevitable," and that "intelligence and facts were being fixed around the" bellicose policy (Rycroft). If that was the case, then deeper reasons for invading Iraq had to do with preserving American interests not only in the Middle East but globally. The false pretenses used to initiate the invasion of Iraq served distinct purposes such as providing a semblance of legitimacy, and also drew some initial attention away from the real power brokers and stakeholders (Fallows). Those stakeholders included those with special interests in maintaining the stability of oil reserves in Iraq, as well as those with special interests in ensuring American hegemony throughout the world.
The invasion of Iraq in 2003 marks what some believe to be the first of potentially many "resource wars" of the new millennia (Ahmed). Iraq possessed not only a critical quantity of oil but also a strategic geographic location poised at the crossroads between East and West. China and India vied for access to oil supplies as their economies grew exponentially. Saddam Hussain controlled all oil within Iraq, but unlike the Saudis, maintained "erratic and unpredictable energy export policies" that were frustrating for American interests and not conducive for the management of American political hegemony either. As many analysts suggest, oil revenues were likely secondary to political power in the decision to invade Iraq. The invasion of Iraq was about "stabilising global energy supplies as a whole by ensuring the free flow of Iraqi oil to world markets," (Ahmed). Proof of this ultimate goal can be found in the reconstruction plans and procedures in Iraq, which were decidedly not humanitarian but capitalist instead. The American government presented "extensive plans for postwar reconstruction ... but they did not consider humanitarian and societal issues of any significance, focusing instead on maintaining the authoritarian structures of Saddam's brutal regime after his removal, while upgrading Iraq's oil infrastructure to benefit foreign investors," (Ahmed). Oil fields that had once been state-owned were now privatized, enabling American energy concerns like Halliburton to wedge into Iraq. With Cheney as Vice President and the chief...
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