• Operate all installations without the owner’s assistance.
• Guarantee safe overseas passage for supplies and petroleum
products.
Achieving American objectives, the Research Service summarized, would
require two to four military divisions, maybe sixty thousand troops, “tied down for a
protracted period of time.” To keep the oil fields running, “drafting U.S. civilian workers to
supplant foreign counterparts might be mandatory.” Because “U.S. parachute assault forces are
too few to cover all objectives quickly [and] amphibious forces are too slow,” skilled
localized sabotage teams could be expected to “wreak havoc” before invasion forces were in
place. “In short, success would largely depend on two prerequisites: slight damage to key
installations [and] Soviet abstinence from armed intervention.”
Even if we confine a takeover to Saudi Arabia, we couldn’t count on it
going smoothly. Whether the House of Sa’ud were still in power or had been supplanted by some
sort of Wahhabi putsch, we would still have to contend with all those weapons Washington sold
the Saudis, and all those fighter pilots and infantry officers trained by American military
personnel and private contractors to use the planes and other weapons. Happily, the U.S. has an
adequate base of operations in Qatar. Additionally, U.S.-trained Saudi forces would realize the
futility of resisting, in part because they know that however many planes and missile launchers
they have, the U.S. has the next generation in far greater numbers. Also, corruption in the
kingdom is so thorough that spare parts for its planes and tanks would quickly be truly spare
and sparse.
Sure, terrorism would likely increase, locally and globally. Al Qaeda,
the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, you name it - none is going down without a fight. Even if the
Saudis aren’t widely loved in the Middle East, the enemy of my enemy is still my friend.
Vilified for the invasion of Iraq, the U.S. would take an even worse beating in international
public-opinion polls. We would have to run roughshod over international organizations and our
own long-standing principles, although the newly promulgated “doctrine of preemptive warfare”
would certainly provide cover. But would all that be worse than standing idly by as the House
of Sa’ud collapsed and the world’s largest known oil reserves fell into the hands of Muslim
Brotherhood-inspired fundamentalists dedicated to jihad against Israel and the West? I don’t
think so. Some things are more calamitous than others, and if the Bush-Cheney administration
knows anything well, it ought to be how to rebuild and run an oil field.
THE CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE feasibility study on seizing Arab
oil fields has mostly disappeared from history, in part because it’s embarrassing for Congress
to be identified with such schemes and in part because the study is almost embarrassingly naive
at times. (“The resultant survey covers the immediate future only, through the 1970s,” the
authors write. “Thereafter, new United States and allied sources of energy could make armed
intervention against petroleum producers an irrelevant act.” Right.) But the magazine article
on which the CRS study builds - Robert W. Tucker’s “Oil: The Issue of American Intervention,”
from the January 1975 issue of
Commentary
- has been nibbling at the dreams of
out-of-the-box Washington thinkers for more than a quarter century. Unlike the CRS bureaucrats,
Tucker doesn’t beat around the bush. He wants to seize the Saudi oil fields, straight and
simple:
Since it is impossible to intervene everywhere, the feasibility of
intervention depends upon whether there is a relatively restricted area which, if effectively
controlled, contains a sufficient portion of present world oil production and proven reserves
to provide reasonable assurance that its control may be used to break the present price
structure by breaking the core of the cartel politically and economically. [Remember: This was
1975.]
The one area that would appear to satisfy these requirements extends
from Kuwait down along the coastal region of Saudi Arabia to Qatar. It is this mostly shallow
coastal strip less than 400 miles in length that provides 40 per cent of present OPEC
production and that has by far the world’s largest proven reserves (over 50 per cent of total
OPEC reserves and 40 per cent of world reserves). Since it has no substantial centers of
population and is without trees, its effective control does not bear even remote comparison
with the experience of Vietnam.
There is a second factor to consider: the Shi’a-Sunni split in Islam.
The Saudi Shi’a in the Eastern Province, the majority of workers in Aramco, are ripe for a
revolution. They are a poor, oppressed minority, not allowed to express their faith, forbidden
from holding any important government position or serving in the military. From time to time,
they’re subject to Wahhabi pogroms. If they’re lucky enough to own any property, it’s liable to
be seized by the Al Sa’ud. Until U.S. and British forces started rolling into Iraq in March
2003, I would have bet that if we had offered the Shi’a a deal to rule the Eastern Province -
the heart of Saudi Arabia’s oil industry - they would have instantly agreed. Now, I’ve got
plenty of doubts. Iraq’s Shi’a didn’t exactly welcome their “liberators” with open arms as the
script called for. But the war still goes on as I write. Maybe by the time it ends, America
won’t seem so arrogant to the Arab world, so intolerant of any world view but its own. That’s a
steep learning curve, but winning over the Shi’a would be worth the effort.
The idea is not as far-fetched as it seems. Already the Pentagon has
made an alliance with Ahmad Chalabi, head of the Iraqi National Congress and a Shi’a, to set up
a government in a post-Saddam Baghdad. Even if he were to take power, Chalabi isn’t likely to
last long. He left Iraq in 1958, still a child, and has spent his adulthood in the West. He has
no political base in Iraq. Few Iraqis know his name. Also, in 1989 he was convicted in Jordan
of defrauding his own bank. If we’re ready to consider a Shi’a with all that baggage, couldn’t
we consider a Saudi Shi’a for the same role?
If you carry the logic forward, it would be possible to extend an arc
of moderate Shi’a governments from Tehran to Kuwait to Bahrain to the Eastern Provinces, all
countries with a substantial Shi’a population. Before September 11, any talk about nation
building on this scale would get you ejected from any serious policy discussion in Washington.
Now we’re faced with the House of Sa’ud’s dissolution, and we may have no other choice. An
invasion and a revolution might be the only things that can save the industrial West from a
prolonged, wrenching depression.
Was it all inevitable? No, which brings me to the final thing I want to
say in this book. Washington made us lie down with the devil. It made the bed, pulled back the
covers, and invited the devil in. We whispered in his ear and told him we loved him. When
things went a little wrong, Washington held his hand and said it was all right. And all that
time we had our eye on his bulging wallet, lit by the moonlight on the dresser.
Index
The following items may be used as a guide to search for
information in this eBook.
Note: Arabic names with the prefix al- or bin are alphabetized by
their main element.
‘Abassi, Hashim
‘Abd-al-‘Aziz (Saudi prince).
See
Azouzi
‘Abd-al-Salam, Mansur
‘Abd-al-Wahhab, Muhammad ibn
‘Abdallah (Saudi crown prince)
reform potential and
U.S. presidents and
‘Abdallah ibn Ibrahim ibn Saif
Abqaiq oil complex
Acheson, Dean
Aerospace Engineering Design
Afghanistan
CIA and
bin Laden bases
Muslim Brothers in
Saudi Arabia and
Soviet invasion of
See also
Taliban
Ahmar, ‘Abdallah al-
Airbus
Air Cess
Alaskan oil, xxiv
Alawites
Aleppo attack (1979)
Algeria
Aliyev, Heydar
Al Sa’ud.
See
House of Sa’ud
Amerada Hess
American University (Beirut)
American University (D.C.)
Amnesty International
Amoco
Amoudi, Muhammad Husayn al-
Angola
anthrax, weaponized
Arab-Israeli wars
Arafat, Yasir
Aramco
Armacost, Michael
arms dealing
Khashoggi and
Lebanese and
Russians and
Saudi purchases
See also
defense industry, U.S.
Arms Export Control Act, U.S.
Asad, Bashar al-
Asad, Hafiz al-
Ashcroft, John
Asad, Rifa’t al-
Atlantic Richfield/ARCO
Atta, Muhammad
Autumn Leaves arrests (1988)
Azerbaijan
Azhar, al- (Cairo university)
Azouzi (Saudi prince)
greed/bid for power by
militant Islam and
‘Azzam, ‘Abdallah (“Amir of Jihad”)
Bahrain
Baker, James
Bandar bin Sultan (Saudi prince; U.S. ambassador)
background/personality of
Saudi money flow and
Washington connections
wife’s Islamic charity gifts
Banna, Hassan al-
Barger, Thomas C.
Basmachi revolt
Basra
Bawazir, Tahir
Bayyumi, Omar
BCCI scandal
BDM International
Bedouin
Begin, Menachem
Beirut
Bell, J. Bowyer
Bentsen, Lloyd
Beschloss, Afsaneh
Beschloss, Michael
Bill (CIA officer)
bin Laden.
See
Laden, Osama bin
Boeing McDonnell Douglas
Bojinka plot
Bosnia
Bout, Victor
BP Amoco
Brady, Nicholas
Bridas
British Aerospace
Brown, Ron
Brzezinski, Zbigniew
Buckley, Bill
budget deficit, U.S.
Burayk, Sa’d al-
Burma
Bush, Barbara
Bush, George H. W.
Bandar friendship
Carlyle Group and
Bush, George W.
‘Abdallah and
oil interests and
Cambridge Energy Research
Capitol Trust Bank
Carlucci, Frank
Carlyle Group
Carlyle Partners II fund
Carter, Jimmy
Casey, William
Caspian Sea oil
Caterair
Central Asia
militant Islamics
oil resources
See also specific countries
Centre Islamique (Geneva)
Chalabi, Ahmad
Chechnya
Cheney, Dick
Cheney, Lynne
Chevron
Chowan College (Murfreesboro, N.C.)
Christopher, Warren
Churchill, Winston
CIA
Afghanistan and
arms dealers and
Central Eurasian Division
cold war focus
Counter-Terrorism Center
lack of Middle East sources
Lebanon and
militant Islam and
Muslim Brotherhood and
Saudi policy
Syria and
Citicorp
Clinton, Bill
Bandar and
Boeing-Saudia deal and
Bosnia policy
Iraq policy
Qatar and
cold war
Muslim Brothers and
Saudia Araia and
Syria and
Cole
, U.S.S., bombing
Congressional Research Service
Cordesman, Anthony
Cutler, Walter
Dalkimoni, Muhammad Hafiz