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The Baker Boys: Stay Half the Course by Greg Palast

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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-08-06 07:21 AM
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The Baker Boys: Stay Half the Course by Greg Palast
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The Baker Boys: Stay Half the Course

Iraq Study Group or Saudi Protection League?
by Greg Palast

They're kidding, right?

James Baker III and the seven dwarfs of the "Iraq Study Group" have come up with some simply brilliant recommendations. Not.

Baker's Two Big Ideas are:

1. Stay half the course. Keeping 140,000 troops in Iraq is a disaster getting more disastrous. The Baker Boys' idea: cut the disaster in half -- leave 70,000 troops there.

But here's where dumb gets dumber: the Bakerites want to "embed" US forces in Iraqi Army units. Question one, Mr. Baker: What Iraqi Army? This so-called "army" is a rough confederation of Shia death squads. We can tell our troops to get "embedded" with them, but the Americans won't get much sleep.

2. "Engage" Iran. This is a good one. How can we get engaged when George Bush hasn't even asked them out for a date? What will induce the shy mullahs of Iran to accept our engagement proposal? Answer: The Bomb.

Let me explain. To get the Iranians to end their subsidizing the Mahdi Army and other Shia cut-throats, the Baker bunch suggest we let the permanent members of the UN Security Council -- plus, Germany -- decide the issue of Iran's nukes. Attaching Germany is the signal. These signers of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) agree that Iran should be allowed a "peaceful" nuclear power program.

More... Now, I am absolutely wary of neo-con nuts who want to blow Iran to Kingdom-come over its nuclear ambitions. But that doesn't mean we should kid ourselves. Iran has zero need of "peaceful" nuclear-generated electricity. It has the second-largest untapped reserve of natural gas on the planet, a clean, safe, cheap source of power. There's only one reason for a "nuclear" program, and it's not to light Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's bedside lamp.

Here's the problem with Baker's weird combo of embedding our boys with Iraq's scary army while sucking up to the Iranians: it won't work. The mayhem will continue, with Americans in the middle, because the Baker brigade dares not mention two words: "Saudi" and "Arabia."

Saudi Arabia is the elephant in the room (camel in the tent?) that can't be acknowledged -- and the reason Baker is so desperately anxious to sell America on keeping half our soldiers in harm's way.

James III wants to seduce or bully Iran into stopping their funding of the murderous Shia militias. But the Shias only shifted into mass killing mode in response to the murder spree by Sunni "insurgents."

Where do the Sunnis get their money for mayhem? According to a seething memo by the National Security Agency (November 8, 2006), the Saudis control the, "public or private funding provided to the insurgents or death squads." Nice.

Baker wants us to bribe or blackmail Iran into stopping one side in Iraq's uncivil war, the Shia. Yet we close our eyes to the Saudis acting as a piggy bank for the other side, the Sunni berserkers. (The House of Saud follows Wahabi Islam, a harsh, fundamentalist sect of Sunnism.)

Why is Baker, ordinarily such a tough guy, so coy with the Saudis? Baker Botts, the law firm he founded, became a wealthy powerhouse by representing Saudi Arabia. But don't worry, the Iraq Study Group is balanced by Democrats including Vernon Jordan of the law firm of Akin, Gump which represents … Saudi royals.

Of course, the connections between Baker, the Bush Family and the Saudis go way beyond a few legal bills. (See, "The Best Little Legal Whorehouse in Texas" from my book Armed Madhouse.

Baker is more than aware that, two weeks ago, Dick Cheney dropped his Thanksgiving turkey to fly to Riyadh at the demand of the Saudis for a dressing down by King Abdullah. The Saudis have made it clear that they will crank up their payments to warriors in Iraq to protect their Sunni brothers if America pulls out our troops.

King Abdullah's wish is Cheney's command -- and Baker's too. The Saudis want 70,000 US troops baby-sitting the Shia killers in Iraq's Army -- and so we will stay.

What gives King Abdullah the power to ghost-write the Iraq Study Group recommendations? It's not because the Saudis sell us broccoli.

And therein lies the danger. Behind the fratricidal fracas in Iraq is something even more dangerous than bullets in Baghdad: a proxy war between Iran and Saudi Arabia to control Iraq's place in OPEC, the oil cartel. What is painted by Baker's Iraq Study Group as an ancient local clash between Shia and Sunni over the Kingdom of God, is, in fact, a remote control proxy war between Iran and Saudi Arabia over the Kingdom of Oil.

*******

Greg Palast is the author of the New York Times bestseller, "Armed Madhouse" which includes Palast's investigation, conducted for Harper's Magazine, of the secret role of James Baker III and Saudi Arabia in the forming of US plans for Iraq's oil.

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EFerrari Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-08-06 07:24 AM
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1. Exacrly:
What is painted by Baker's Iraq Study Group as an ancient local clash between Shia and Sunni over the Kingdom of God, is, in fact, a remote control proxy war between Iran and Saudi Arabia over the Kingdom of Oil.
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PA Democrat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-08-06 07:34 AM
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2. Palast has nailed it.
Interesting that Cheney is seen pressing the flesh with the Saudis just days before the report is released and interesting that no one in this administartion is willing to call out the Saudis for their role in fueling the Iraq civil war. They're too busy saber-rattling over Iran.
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gademocrat7 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-08-06 08:02 AM
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3. True,true
It's all about the oil.
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BR_Parkway Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-08-06 08:02 AM
Response to Original message
4. K&R - there you go, it doesn't get put any simpler than that - an entire
storyline, including history of the middle east politics for the past 3-4 decades - summed up nice and neatly in under 10 paragraphs.
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chefgirl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-08-06 08:06 AM
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5. Palast always nails it
I URGE everyone to read 'Armed Madhouse' if you haven't already.

An entire book filled with clarity the way only Greg Palast can offer it. Boy is it an eye opener!

ALWAYS look to the Bush/Saudi connection whenever two and two don't exactly seem to be adding up to four, and you will unfailingly find the answers.

Let's face it, these days, the United States is a wholly owned subsidiary of Saudi Arabia, thanks to the BFEE.

Total energy independence, IMO, is our only hope at this point.

-chef-
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ms liberty Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-08-06 08:33 AM
Response to Original message
6. Greg Palast nails it again...K&R n/t
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jazzjunkysue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-08-06 05:29 PM
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7. Palast can actually make all this BS make sense. Bravo. K&R! n/t.
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