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International News Updates |
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3 May 2009 For the
past seven months world news outlets have provided
daily coverage on what has been described as
escalating piracy off the coast of Somalia in the Gulf
of Aden and attempts by international, primarily
Western, military vessels to combat it.
Absent from such reporting, as the exigencies of
commercial news broadcasting inevitably entail, is how
and why the situation in the region reached the
impasse it has and what its broader significance is.
Instead the picture
presented is, according to the standard formula, a
point on a blank canvas with no historical depth, no
geoeconomic and geopolitical width and no strata of
diversified and interrelated causes that contribute to
and dynamics that result from what is in truth a
lengthy and complex process of developments.
In short the Somali situation is portrayed as a simple
and self-contained event that at a seemingly
gratutitous moment was declared a crisis.
There are dozens of comparable cases in the world,
analagous in the general sense of presenting economic,
security, national and regional threats to other
nations and their environs, but these have not been
declared crises and so aren't given world attention.
The determination of what constitutes a crisis, and a
world crisis at that, since the end of the Cold War is
a prerogative of the United States and its
allies, the governments of which render the verdict,
with their own and much of the world's news media
echoing the claim.
And the evaluation is inevitably a onesided affair.
What has been observed about Europe's most mature
writers - Skakespeare, Goethe and Balzac, for example
- that their antagonists were never mere villains,
that they reflected the complexity and even ambiguity
of real life with no character monopolizing the
virtues or the vices - is summarily discarded and a
broad panaroma of multifaceted motives, players and
conflicts reduced to an banal pseudo-morality play
with just three actors: Evil culprits, innocent
victims and valiant heroes.
The first category is assigned to any individual or
group which is opposed to the designs on their nation
by major Western powers or, what is interpreted by the
latter as the same thing, pursue a policy of
protecting local rights and interests. The second is
comprised of whoever can be cast into the role to
arouse indignation and hostility against the first,
currently the crews of Western commercial vessels in
the Gulf of Aden. And the third is led by the United
States, NATO and the European Union, the
self-deputized military vigilantes of the world.
That many of those off the Somali coast capturing
foreign, mainly Western, vessels and holding them,
their cargo and their crews for ransom are reported to
be former fishermen driven out of their sole
occupation by years of intrusive and illegal
large-scale poaching by world commercial concerns or
affected by eighteen years of toxic, including
nuclear, wastes dumped off their shores isn't
acknowledged. To do so would complicate the narrative
contrived by those who have with disastrous
consequences interfered in the internal affairs of
Somalia and its neighborhood for several decades and
are in large part responsible for the current crisis.
Instead the action begins where the governments of the
Western states that have deployed warships,
helicopters, snipers and bases to the region script
its opening act: With pirates.
As though a director would begin a production of
Shakespeare's Hamlet with the protagonist thrusting
his sword through Polonius and not with the visitation
of his father's ghost, so that Hamlet appeared as a
brutal murderer and not a reluctant avenger of
parricide and regicide.
The national tragedy of Somalia didn't begin last
summer with an increase in the seizure of foreign
vessels off its coast; it didn't begin with the armed
conflict between the Transitional Federal Government
and the Islamic Courts Union in 2006 and the invasion
by military forces of the US proxy government of
Ethiopia; it didn't commence in 1991 with the ouster
of long-time president Siad Barre and internecine
fighting between militia groups.
It started in 1977.
Eight years earlier, almost forty years to the day, a
military government headed by General Siad Barre came
to power in Somalia. Anticipating what would become a
general pattern in Africa and indeed throughout most
of the non-Euro-Atlantic world, the government pursued
a path of non-capitalist, avowedly socialist
development. The term Barre and his allies used was
scientific socialism; that is, Marxism.
In the decade between 1969 and 1979 similiar political
and socio-economic transformations occurred throughout
Africa, resulting in socialist-oriented
goverments allied with and receiving assistance from
the Soviet Union. In addition to Somalia, nations
matching this description included Angola, Benin,
Capo Verde, the Republic of Congo (Brazzaville), the
Republic of Guinea (Conakry), Guinea Bissau, Libya,
Madagascar, Mozambique and Sao Tome and Principe, with
Namibia, Rhodesia, South Africa and Western Sahara
poised to follow suit.
The pattern also emerged in Asia - Vietnam with its
unification in 1975, Laos, Cambodia (after the ouster
of the Khmer Rouge in 1978) and Afghanistan; on the
Arabian peninsula with South Yemen; and in Latin
America and the Caribbean with Chile, Nicaragua,
Grenada, Jamaica and Surinam during the same period.
What was progressing at an apparently inexorable pace
was the integration of the Soviet-led socialist bloc,
including Cuba, with the entire developing,
non-aligned world which coincided with and gave
substance to the demands for a New International
Economic Order advocated by the developing nations
through the United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development (UNCTAD) and supported by the world
socialist community.
Demands included the replacement of the US-enforced
Bretton Woods system - the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund in the first instances -
in a revision of the entire international economic
system that would elevate the nations of the South
from mere monoculture exporters to diversified and
modernized countries with with industrial bases.
On March 25, 1975 the Second General Conference of UN
Industrial Development Organisation, meeting in Peru,
adopted the Lima Declaration and Plan of Action on
Industrial Development and Co-operation which included
the following provisions:
"That every state has the inalienable right to
exercise freely its sovereignty and permanent control
over its natural resources, both terrestrial and
marine,
and over all economic activity for the exploitation of
these resources in the manner appropriate to its
circumstances, including nationalisation in accordance
with its laws as an expression of this right, and that
no state shall be subjected to any forms of economic,
political or other coercion which impedes the full and
free exercise of that inalienable right."
"That special attention should be given to the least
developed countries, which should enjoy a net transfer
of resources from the developed countries in the form
of technical and financial resources as well as
capital goods, to enable the least developed countries
in conformity with the policies and plans for
development, to accelerate their industrialisation."
"The new distribution of industrial activities
envisaged in a New International Economic Order must
make it possible for all developing countries to
industrialise and to obtain an efficient instrument
within the United Nations system to fulfil their
aspirations."
One objective of the plan was to insure that by 2000
25-30% of world industrial production was to occur in
the developing world - and not in the manner that has
ensued in the current neoliberal order with the
transfer of manufacturing to underdeveloped states in
a manner that has rather intensified than diminished
exploitation of both labor and resources.
With the rising tide of political changes in the
developing world during the same time, a shift from
neocolonialist dependency toward genuine independence
and development, and the support of the Soviet-led
socialist bloc - which with its industrial base was
issuing longterm, low interest loans to southern
nations for infrastructual and industrial projects -
the prospects for the creation of new global economic
and political order was on the near horizon.
But not everyone was pleased with this development.
The US - alone - opposed the Lima Declaration and the
follow up New Delhi Declaration and Plan of Action
four years later.
America's NATO allies, almost to a member at the time
former colonial powers bent on maintaining historial
prerogatives over their former possessions, were no
less dissatisfied.
And the People's Republic of China, having lost
earlier bids to dominate the world communist movement
and what it deemed the Third World alike, was focused
entirely on combating what it derided as "Soviet
social imperialism" and after the secret meeting of
Henry Kissinger and Chou En-lai in Beijing in 1971,
followed by Richard Nixon's meeting there with Mao
Tse-Tung the next year, worked hand-in-glove with the
US to counter Soviet influence around the world,
including providing joint support to armed groups
fighting against the governments of Angola,
Afghanistan, Cambodia and Ethiopia.
With what would in the 21st Century be called the US's
hard power/soft power duality and rotation, the Nixon
era method of dealing with the reorientation of
developing nations away from the West and toward the
East - most cynically and brutally exemplified by its
support to the military overthrow of the elected
Salvador Allende government in Chile in 1973 - gave
way to that of the Carter administration and its
foreign policy grey eminence and all-purpose
Mephistopheles Zbigniew Brzezinski in January of 1977.
The Carter administration had barely moved into the
White House when it began to bribe the governments of
Somalia, Afghanistan, Egypt and Iraq into entering
political and military alliances and in several cases
giving notorious "green lights" for military invasions
of other nations. Its foreign policy architect was not
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, but the man who
brought about Vance's downfall and resignation over
the Operation Eagle Claw fiasco in Iran in 1980:
Brzezinski, an arch-Russophobe during the Soviet
period and ever since even onto the grave.
Somalia is the main subject of investigation, but a
brief review of similiar cases is in order.
In its first year in office the Carter administration
bought off Egypt's Anwar Sadat, splitting the Arab
world, destroying any unified approach to the
Palestinian catastrophe and the realization of UN
resolutions 242 and 338 and ousting the Soviet Union
as the fourth partner in the Middle East peace
process, leaving Israel and Egypt armed and backed by
the US and the rest of the Arab world, including
Palestine, unrepresented, unprotected and defenseless.
Since 1979 Egypt has been the second largest recipient
of US military aid in the world, with only Israel
besting it in that category. Over the past thirty
years Egypt has received more US aid, over $30
billion, than any other country.
In the period between Anwar Sadat's visit to Israel in
November of 1977 and the Camp David Accords of
September of 1978, in March of 1978 Israeli launched
an invasion of Lebanon, Operation Litani, with over
25,000 troops, a warm-up exercise for the full-fledged
attack of 1983.
This was one of the green lights given by the Carter
administration.
A year later Washington gave a green light to China to
invade Vietnam, according to Beijing to "punish" the
latter for its role in helping drive the Khmer Rouge
from Cambodia the previous year.
In the summer of 1978 US National Security Adviser
Zbigniew Brzezinski, emulating Kissinger's trip in
1971, paid a secret visit to Beijing to normalize
relations with China, leading to recognition of the
People's Republic and derecognition of Taiwan on
January 1, 1979.
On January 29, 1979 Chinese Vice Premier Deng Xiaoping
arrived in Washington, the first visit by a senior
Chinese official to the United States since 1949.
According to former Balkans hand and current US
Afghanistan-Pakistan point man Richard Holbrooke, the
trip "began with a private dinner at Brzezinski’s
house." [1]
Deng left on February 6 and eleven days later China
launched an invasion of Vietnam along its entire
northern border.
Reports exist that in July of 1980 US CIA officials -
some rumors say Brzezinski himself - travelled to the
Jordanian capital of Amman to meet with high-ranking
officials of the Iraqi government. Then Iranian
president Abol Hassan Bani-Sadr claims the meeting
included both Brzezinski and Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein. [2]
As recently as March of 2009 Iran's Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei renewed the accusation, stating that "They
gave Saddam the green light to attack our
country. If Saddam had not received the green light
from the U.S., most probably he would not have
attacked our borders."
Later the first Reagan administration secretary of
state, Alexander Haig, wrote in a memo to Reagan that
"President Carter gave the Iraqis a green light to
launch the war against Iran through [Saudi Arabian
Prince] Fahd."
In appreciation of Somalia's geostrategic importance,
in the first days of the Carter-Brzezinski
administration efforts were made to wean Somalia from
its pro-Soviet stance and to secure military, mainly
naval, bases on its territory.
The covert campaign was largely conducted through the
mediation of Saudi Arabia and in July led to the
Somali invasion of the Ogaden region of Ethiopia with
tens of thousands of troops, tanks and warplanes.
"Somalia had mounted its major offensive in Ogaden
because of a U.S. promise to furnish arms aid. The
U.S. policy had resulted from Ethiopia's decision to
expel U.S. military advisers from the country and its
successful bid for aid from the Soviet Union.
"According to the report, Somali President Mohamed
Said Barre had received secret U.S. assurances that
the U.S. would not oppose 'further guerrilla
pressure in the Ogaden' and would 'consider
sympathetically Somalia's legitimate defense needs.'
[3]
The Soviet Union and its Cuban ally assisted Ethiopia
and the US and China, mainly through Saudi Arabia,
provided arms to Somalia.
Brzezinski urged the deployment of the US aircraft
carrier Kitty Hawk to the region as a show of support
to Somalia and an act of defiance toward the Soviet
Union and its Ethiopian ally and, referring to the
Strategic Arms Limitation Talks of the time, said
"SALT lies buried in the sands of the Ogaden," as a
report of the time phrased it "signifying the death of
detente."
Somalia was defeated and withdrew the last of its
military forces from the Ogaden Desert in March of
1978. Estimates are that the war cost Somalia
one-third of its army, three-eighths of its armored
units and half of its air force.
In marked the beginning of the end for Barre and for
Somalia itself. Barre would linger on as president of
a weakened Somalia until his overthrow in 1991, yet
another former client cast off after having served his
purpose.
His ouster would be followed by years of conflict
between rival armed militias and US military
intervention that caused the deaths of thousands of
Somalis.
Yet for all the horrors US administrations from that
of Carter to the current one have visited upon the
Somali people, Washington gained what it intended to:
Military bases and forces astride many of the world's
most strategic shipping lanes and chokepoints in an
area encompassing the Suez Canal and the Red Sea into
the Gulf of Aden and the Arabian Sea and the Indian
Ocean.
In 1977 the Carter White House issued a presidential
directive calling for a worldwide mobile military
force which in October of 1979 Carter would officially
designate Rapid Deployment Forces (RDF).
The site for its first deployments were to be the
recently acquired military client states of Somalia
and Egypt along with Sudan, Oman and Kenya.
The initiative was inaugurated as the Rapid Deployment
Joint Task Force (RDJTF) on March 1, 1980 and
according to its first commander, "It's the first time
that I know of that we have ever attempted to
establish, in peacetime, a full four service Joint
Headquarters." [4]
Orginally envisioned to focus on the Persian Gulf, the
RDJTF was expanded to include Egypt, Sudan, Djibouti,
Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia as well as
Afghanistan, Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Oman,
Pakistan, the People's Republic of Yemen [Aden],
Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and the
Yemen Arab Republic.
That is, from the Mediterranean Sea and the Persian
Gulf to the eastern coast of Africa to the western one
of the Indian subcontinent with the northern half of
the Indian Ocean and its seas and gulfs included.
Carter's announcement of the launching of the Rapid
Deployment Forces preceded by three months his 1980
State of the Union Address in which he laid out the
doctrine that has since borne his name.
Coming less than a month after the first Soviet troops
entered Afghanistan, Carter's comments included this
disingenuous hyperbole:
"The region which is now threatened by Soviet troops
in Afghanistan is of great strategic importance: It
contains more than two-thirds of the world's
exportable oil. The Soviet effort to dominate
Afghanistan has brought Soviet military forces to
within 300 miles of the Indian Ocean and close to the
Straits of Hormuz, a waterway through which most of
the world's oil must flow."
That at the time a small handful of Soviet troops had
arrived in Kabul, the capital of a landlocked nation
hundreds of miles from one of the world's five
oceans, could in no conceivable manner affect the
Straits of Hormuz.
Carter continued: "An attempt by any outside force to
gain control of the Persian Gulf region will be
regarded as an assault on the vital interests of the
United States of America, and such an assault will be
repelled by any means necessary, including military
force."
Brzezinski claims credit for authoring the second half
of the above sentence, modeling it on the Truman
Doctrine "to make it very clear that the Soviets
should stay away from the Persian Gulf." [5]
It is exactly the Carter Doctrine that was employed by
the US for its two wars against Iraq in 1991 and 2003
and for its ongoing military presence in the Persian
Gulf in preparation for aggression against Iran.
As "soft power" Carter was succeeded by "hard power"
Reagan, the Rapid Deployment Forces were converted
into Central Command, the US's first new regional
military command since World War II, under Defense
Secretary Caspar Weinberger.
Central Command (CENTCOM) has as its area of
responsibility twenty nations: Afghanistan, Bahrain,
Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kuwait,
Kyrgyzstan, Lebanon, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi
Arabia, Syria, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, the United
Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan, and Yemen. It also takes in
the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf and western portions of
the Indian Ocean.
It also included the only African nations not formerly
assigned to the European and Pacific Commands -
Djibouti, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Seychelles,
Somalia and the Sudan - until all 53 African states
were turned over to the new African Command last
October.
CENTCOM was the main force in the 1991 and 2003 wars
against Iraq and the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan.
Both Iraq and Afghanistan remain in its area of
responsibility and its current commander, General
David Petraeus, is in charge of operations in both
nations.
It has bases in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, the United
Arab Emirates, Oman, Pakistan and Central Asia and
until recently at Camp Lemonier in Djibouti on the
Horn of Africa, now part of African Command.
The Command's zone of operations is in fact the
northern half of the Indian Ocean from the Persian
Gulf and the Straits of Hormuz where some 40% of the
oil shipped in the world passes to the Gulf of Aden
where, as recent reports frequently repeat, ten
percent of all global shipping occurs to the Strait of
Malacca between Malaysia and Indonesia where 25% of
world trade, including half of all sea shipments of
oil and two-thirds of global liquefied natural gas
shipments bound for East Asia, pass.
In addition to the US, NATO launched its first naval
operation in the Gulf of Aden last October and has now
resumed it with the deployment of the Standing NATO
Maritime Group 1 (SNMG1).
The SNMG1 held naval maneuvers with Pakistan last week
off the coast of Karachi in the Arabian Sea.
These deployments are a continuation of NATO's plans
in the region described last year by veteran Indian
journalist M K Bhadrakumar in an article titled "NATO
reaches into the Indian Ocean":
"By October 15 [2008], seven ships from NATO navies
had already transited the Suez Canal on their way to
the Indian Ocean. En route, they will conduct a series
of Persian Gulf port visits to countries neighboring
Iran - Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab
Emirates, which are NATO's 'partners' within the
framework of the so-called Istanbul Cooperation
Initiative. The mission comprises ships from the US,
Britain, Germany, Italy, Greece and Turkey.
"NATO's Supreme Allied Commander Europe, General John
Craddock, acknowledged that the mission furthers the
alliance's ambition to become a global political
organization.
"By acting with lightning speed and without publicity,
NATO surely created a fait accompli.
"NATO's naval deployment in the Indian Ocean region is
a historic move and a milestone in the alliance's
transformation. Even at the height of the Cold War,
the alliance didn't have a presence in the Indian
Ocean. Such deployments almost always tend to be
open-ended.
"In retrospect, the first-ever visit by a NATO naval
force in mid-September last year to the Indian Ocean
was a full-dress rehearsal to this end. Brussels said
at that time, 'The aim of the mission is to
demonstrate NATO's capability to uphold security and
international law on the high seas and build links
with regional navies.' In 2007, a NATO naval force
visited Seychelles in the Indian Ocean and Somalia and
conducted exercises in the Indian Ocean and then
re-entered the Mediterranean via the Red Sea in
end-September.
"[An] Indian warship [dispatched off the coast of
Somalia] will eventually have to work in tandem with
the NATO naval force. This will be the first time that
the Indian armed forces will be working
shoulder-to-shoulder with NATO forces in actual
operations in territorial or international waters.
"The operations hold the potential to shift India's
ties with NATO to a qualitatively new level." [6]
Securing the safe passage of vessels in the Gulf of
Aden and particulalrly those delivering United Nations
World Food Programme aid is a legitimate concern.
Plans by the United States and NATO to turn the whole
Indian Ocean into its military and global energy war
lake are not.
1) Project Syndicate, December 28, 2008
2) My Turn To Speak: Iran, The Revolution And Secret
Deals With The U.S, 1991
3) Newsweek, September 23, 1977
4) Royal United Services Institute for Defence and
Security Studies Journal,
June 1981
5) Power and Principle: Memoirs of the National
Security Adviser
6) Asia Times, October 20, 2008 |