Nature and Politics
by Jeffrey St. Clair and Alexander Cockburn
Forbidden Truths?
Conspiracy is going mainstream. On the morning of January 8 Paula Zahn of
CNN went into wide-eyed mode as she parlayed with Richard Butler, former
head of the UN inspection team in Iraq, latterly part of the
wipe-out-Saddam lobby and now on the CNN payroll. They were discussing the
hot book of the hour, "Bin Laden, la verite interdite" ("Bin Laden, the
forbidden truth"), by Jean-Charles Brisard and Guillaume Dasquie. It's just
appeared in Paris.
ZAHN: Start off with what your understanding is of what is in this
book--the most explosive charge.
BUTLER: The most explosive charge, Paula, is that the Bush
administration--the present one--just shortly after assuming office, slowed
down FBI investigations of Al Qaeda and terrorism in Afghanistan in order
to do a deal with the Taliban on oil--an oil pipeline across Afghanistan.
ZAHN: And this book points out that the FBI's deputy director, John
O'Neill, actually resigned because he felt the US administration was
obstructing...
BUTLER: A proper...
ZAHN: ...the prosecution of terrorism.
And that's only the tip of the iceberg. From the American Patriots, through
BuzzFlash (which seems to have an umbilical cord to the Democratic National
Committee) to ultra-left sites there's a menu of conspiracy charges that
would sate the most indefatigable gourmand. To cite a by-no-means complete
list, we have the charges noted above; we also have foreknowledge by the
Bush administration of the 9/11 attacks, with a deliberate decision to do
nothing to thwart the onslaughts.
What else? We have the accusation that members of the US intelligence
community, possibly in league with Bush-related business operatives, used
their foreknowledge of the attacks to invest large sums in "put options,"
gambling on the likelihood that the stock value of United Airlines and
American Airlines would plummet in the wake of the suicide attacks.
Don't stop there! The Internet boils with accusations that US fighter
planes were ordered to stand down on September 11, although there was a
possibility these planes could have intercepted and downed the suicide
planes.
Then there's the role of oil. Quite property, Americans always relish
charges that Big Oil is up to no good, and this appetite is being
assiduously catered to. There are plenty of columns imparting the news that
the war in Afghanistan is "all about oil." From this premise flow torrents
of speculation of the sort made by the two Frenchmen cited above.
The trouble with many conspiracy theories is that they strain excessively
to avoid the obvious. Namely:
Both under Bush's and Clinton's presidencies the US has been eager since
the fall of the Soviet Union to find some way to assist the hopes of US oil
companies and pipeline companies to exploit the oil resources of the Asian
republics, most notably reserves in western Kazakhstan. Similarly
consistent has been the US's desire not to have oil from Kazakhstan pass
through Russia. Until US-Iranian relations are restored that has left the
option of a pipeline from Kazakhstan westward through Azerbaijan to Ceyhan
on the Mediterranean coast of Turkey or a pipeline south through
Afghanistan to a Pakistani port.
In tandem with these hopes to ship out Kazakh oil has been the desire to
get a regime in Afghanistan sufficiently stable to allow Unocal to build
its line, and sufficiently deferential to the US to arrest or at last boot
out Osama bin Laden. US relations with the Saudis were as always predicated
on the paramount necessity of ensuring the stability of the regime without
burdening it with unpalatable demands. If history is any guide a lot of
this diplomacy was doubtless clumsily done, in alternations between
proffers of carrots and threats of the stick.
But does this mean that the US went to war in Afghanistan "for oil?" Surely
not. If stability was the goal, then war was a foolish option. The Bush
regime hastened into war because America had sustained the greatest
massacre on its soil since Pearl Harbor, and Bush and his advisers faced
the political imperative of finding an enemy at top speed on which to exact
dramatic vengeance.
This isn't to say there weren't hawks inside the Bush administration who
were lobbying for plans to overthrow the Taliban in early summer, plans of
which the Taliban became aware, possibly conniving at the September 11
attacks in consequence.
As for all those mad theories about permitting the September 11 attacks to
occur, or about remote control planes: they seem to add up to the notion
that America's foes are too incompetent to mount operations unaided by US
agencies, or that agencies are vast, bumbling bureaucracies quite capable
of ignoring or discounting warnings of an attack.
But there is wheat among the chaff. It's true that someone gambled on those
put options, that the profits from that gamble have remained uncollected
and that "Buzzy" Krongard is an interesting character who did go from the
post of vice-chairman of Banker's Trust/A.B. Brown (now owned by
DeutscheBank) which handled many of the put option bets, to the CIA of
which he is now executive director.
It is true that the CIA ushered bin Laden into Afghanistan and it is true
that the CIA was complicit in Afghanistan's emergence in the 1980s as the
West's leading supplier of opium and morphine, just as the Agency helped
construct the cave redoubts of Tora Bora. The US taxpayers underwrote that
construction, just as they're underwriting the destruction.
That's not conspiracy-mongering. That's truth.
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