The Geopolitics
of War
by Michael T. Klare, November 5, 2001
Originally Published in The
Nation
There are many
ways to view the conflict between the United States and Osama
bin Laden's terror network: as a contest between Western liberalism
and Eastern fanaticism, as suggested by many pundits in the United
States; as a struggle between the defenders and the enemies of
authentic Islam, as suggested by many in the Muslim world; and
as a predictable backlash against American villainy abroad, as
suggested by some on the left. But while useful in assessing some
dimensions of the conflict, these cultural and political analyses
obscure a fundamental reality: that this war, like most of the
wars that preceded it, is firmly rooted in geopolitical competition.
The geopolitical dimensions of the
war are somewhat hard to discern because the initial fighting
is taking place in Afghanistan, a place of little intrinsic interest
to the United States, and because our principal adversary, bin
Laden, has no apparent interest in material concerns. But this
is deceptive, because the true center of the conflict is Saudi
Arabia, not Afghanistan (or Palestine), and because bin Laden's
ultimate objectives include the imposition of a new Saudi government,
which in turn would control the single most valuable geopolitical
prize on the face of the earth: Saudi Arabia's vast oil deposits,
representing one-fourth of the world's known petroleum reserves.
To fully appreciate the roots of the current conflict, it is necessary
to travel back in time--specifically, to the final years of World
War II, when the US government began to formulate plans for the
world it would dominate in the postwar era. As the war drew to
a close, the State Department was enjoined by President Roosevelt
to devise the policies and institutions that would guarantee US
security and prosperity in the coming epoch. This entailed the
design and formation of the United Nations, the construction of
the Bretton Woods world financial institutions and, most significant
in the current context, the procurement of adequate oil supplies.
American strategists considered access to oil to
be especially important because it was an essential factor in
the Allied victory over the Axis powers. Although the nuclear
strikes on Hiroshima and Nagasaki ended the war, it was oil that
fueled the armies that brought Germany and Japan to their knees.
Oil powered the vast numbers of ships, tanks and aircraft that
endowed Allied forces with a decisive edge over their adversaries,
which lacked access to reliable sources of petroleum. It was widely
assumed, therefore, that access to large supplies of oil would
be critical to US success in any future conflicts.
Where would this oil come from? During World Wars
I and II, the United States was able to obtain sufficient oil
for its own and its allies' needs from deposits in the American
Southwest and from Mexico and Venezuela. But most US analysts
believed that these supplies would be insufficient to meet American
and European requirements in the postwar era. As a result, the
State Department initiated an intensive study to identify other
sources of petroleum. This effort, led by the department's economic
adviser, Herbert Feis, concluded that only one location could
provide the needed petroleum. "In all surveys of the situation,"
Feis noted (in a statement quoted by Daniel Yergin in The Prize),
"the pencil came to an awed pause at one point and place--the
Middle East."
To be more specific, Feis and his associates concluded
that the world's most prolific supply of untapped oil was to be
found in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. But how to get at this oil?
At first, the State Department proposed the formation of a government-owned
oil firm to acquire concessions in Saudi Arabia and extract the
kingdom's reserves. This plan was considered too unwieldy, however,
and instead US officials turned this task over to the Arabian
American Oil Company (ARAMCO), an alliance of major US oil corporations.
But these officials were also worried about the kingdom's long-term
stability, so they concluded that the United States would have
to assume responsibility for the defense of Saudi Arabia. In one
of the most extraordinary occurrences in modern American history,
President Roosevelt met with King Abd al-Aziz Ibn Saud, the founder
of the modern Saudi regime, on a US warship in the Suez Canal
following the February 1945 conference in Yalta. Although details
of the meeting have never been made public, it is widely believed
that Roosevelt gave the King a promise of US protection in return
for privileged American access to Saudi oil--an arrangement that
remains in full effect today and constitutes the essential core
of the US-Saudi relationship.
This relationship has provided enormous benefits
to both sides. The United States has enjoyed preferred access
to Saudi petroleum reserves, obtaining about one-sixth of its
crude-oil imports from the kingdom. ARAMCO and its US partners
have reaped immense profits from their operations in Saudi Arabia
and from the distribution of Saudi oil worldwide. (Although ARAMCO's
Saudi holdings were nationalized by the Saudi government in 1976,
the company continues to manage Saudi oil production and to market
its petroleum products abroad.) Saudi Arabia also buys about $6-10
billion worth of goods per year from US companies. The Saudi royal
family, for its part, has become immensely wealthy and, because
of continued US protection, has remained safe from external and
internal attack.
But this extraordinary partnership has also produced
a number of unintended consequences, and it is these effects that
concern us here. To protect the Saudi regime against its external
enemies, the United States has steadily expanded its military
presence in the region, eventually deploying thousands of troops
in the kingdom. Similarly, to protect the royal family against
its internal enemies, US personnel have become deeply involved
in the regime's internal security apparatus. At the same time,
the vast and highly conspicuous accumulation of wealth by the
royal family has alienated it from the larger Saudi population
and led to charges of systemic corruption. In response, the regime
has outlawed all forms of political debate in the kingdom (there
is no parliament, no free speech, no political party, no right
of assembly) and used its US-trained security forces to quash
overt expressions of dissent. All these effects have generated
covert opposition to the regime and occasional acts of violence--and
it is from this undergroundmilieu that Osama bin Laden has drawn
his inspiration and many of his top lieutenants.
The US military presence in Saudi Arabia has steadily
increased over the years. Initially, from 1945 to 1972, Washington
delegated the primary defense responsibility to Britain, long
the dominant power in the region. When Britain withdrew its forces
from "East of Suez" in 1971, the United States assumed
a more direct role, deploying military advisers in the kingdom
and providing Saudi Arabia with a vast arsenal of US weapons.
Some of these arms and advisory programs were aimed at external
defense, but the Defense Department also played a central role
in organizing, equipping, training and managing the Saudi Arabian
National Guard (SANG), the regime's internal security force.
American military involvement in the kingdom reached
a new level in 1979, when three things happened: The Soviet Union
invaded Afghanistan, the Shah of Iran was overthrown by antigovernment
forces and Islamic militants staged a brief rebellion in Mecca.
In response, President Jimmy Carter issued a new formulation of
US policy: Any move by a hostile power to gain control of the
Persian Gulf area would be regarded "as an assault on the
vital interests of the United States of America" and would
be resisted "by any means necessary, including military force."
This statement, now known as the "Carter Doctrine,"
has governed US strategy in the gulf ever since. To implement
the new doctrine, Carter established the Rapid Deployment Force,
a collection of combat forces based in the United States but available
for deployment to the Persian Gulf. (The RDF was later folded
into the US Central Command, which now conducts all US military
operations in the region.) Carter also deployed US warships in
the gulf and arranged for the periodic utilization by American
forces of military bases in Bahrain, Diego Garcia (a British-controlled
island in the Indian Ocean), Oman and Saudi Arabia--all of which
were employed during the 1990-91 Gulf War and are again being
used today. Believing, moreover, that the Soviet presence in Afghanistan
represented a threat to US dominance in the gulf, Carter authorized
the initiation of covert operations to undermine the Soviet-backed
regime there. (It is important to note that the Saudi regime was
deeply involved in this effort, providing much of the funding
for the anti-Soviet rebellion and allowing its citizens, including
Osama bin Laden, to participate in the war effort as combatants
and fundraisers.) And to protect the Saudi royal family, Carter
increased US involvement in the kingdom's internal security operations.
President Reagan accelerated Carter's overt military
moves and greatly increased covert US support for the anti-Soviet
mujahedeen in Afghanistan. (Eventually, some $3 billion worth
of arms were given to the mujahedeen.) Reagan also issued an important
codicil to the Carter Doctrine: The United States would not allow
the Saudi regime to be overthrown by internal dissidents, as occurred
in Iran. "We will not permit [Saudi Arabia] to be an Iran,"
he told reporters in 1981.
Then came the Persian Gulf War. When Iraqi forces
invaded Kuwait on August 2, 1990, President Bush the elder was
principally concerned about the threat to Saudi Arabia, not Kuwait.
At a meeting at Camp David on August 4, he determined that the
United States must take immediate military action to defend the
Saudi kingdom against possible Iraqi attack. To allow for a successful
defense of the kingdom, Bush sent his Secretary of Defense, Dick
Cheney, to Riyadh to persuade the royal family to allow the deployment
of US ground forces on Saudi soil and the use of Saudi bases for
airstrikes against Iraq.
The subsequent unfolding of Operation Desert Storm
does not need to be retold here. What is important to note is
that the large US military presence in Saudi Arabia was never
fully withdrawn after the end of the fighting in Kuwait. American
aircraft continue to fly from bases in Saudi Arabia as part of
the enforcement mechanism of the "no-fly zone" over
southern Iraq (intended to prevent the Iraqis from using this
airspace to attack Shiite rebels in the Basra area or to support
a new invasion of Kuwait). American aircraft also participate
in the multinational effort to enforce the continuing economic
sanctions on Iraq.
President Clinton further strengthened the US position
in the gulf, expanding American basing facilities there and enhancing
the ability to rapidly move US-based forces to the region.Clinton
also sought to expand US influence in the Caspian Sea basin, an
energy-rich area just to the north of the Persian Gulf.
Many consequences have flowed from all this. The
sanctions on Iraq have caused immense suffering for the Iraqi
population, while the regular bombing of military facilities produces
a mounting toll of Iraqi civilian deaths. Meanwhile, the United
States has failed to take any action to curb Israeli violence
against the Palestinians. It is these concerns that have prompted
many young Muslims to join bin Laden's forces. Bin Laden himself,
however, is most concerned about Saudi Arabia. Ever since the
end of the Gulf War, he has focused his efforts on achieving two
overarching goals: the expulsion of the American "infidels"
from Saudi Arabia (the heart of the Muslim holy land) and the
overthrow of the current Saudi regime and its replacement with
one more attuned to his fundamentalist Islamic beliefs.
Both of these goals put bin Laden in direct conflict
with the United States. It is this reality, more than any other,
that explains the terrorist strikes on US military personnel and
facilities in the Middle East, and key symbols of American power
in New York and Washington.
The current war did not begin on September 11.
As far as we can tell, it began in 1993 with the first attack
on the World Trade Center. This was succeeded in 1995 with an
attack on the SANG headquarters in Riyadh, and in 1996 with the
explosion at the Khobar Towers outside of Dhahran. Then followed
the 1998 bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, and
the more recent attack on the USS Cole. All these events, like
the World Trade Center/Pentagon assaults, are consistent with
a long-term strategy to erode US determination to maintain its
alliance with the Saudi regime- and thus, in the final analysis,
to destroy the 1945 compact forged by President Roosevelt and
King Abd al-Aziz Ibn Saud.
In fighting against these efforts, the United States
is acting, in the first instance, to protect itself, its citizens
and its military personnel from terrorist violence. At the same
time, however, Washington is also shoring up its strategic position
in the Persian Gulf. With bin Laden out of the way, Iran suffering
from internal political turmoil and Saddam Hussein immobilized
by unrelenting American airstrikes, the dominant US position in
the gulf will be assured for some time to come. (Washington's
one big worry is that the Saudi monarchy will face increasing
internal opposition because of its close association with the
United States; it is for this reason that the Bush Administration
has not leaned too hard on the regime to permit US forces to use
Saudi bases for attacks on Afghanistan and to freeze the funds
of Saudi charities linked to Osama bin Laden.)
For both sides, then, this conflict has important
geopolitical dimensions. A Saudi regime controlled by Osama bin
Laden could be expected to sever all ties with US oil companies
and to adopt new policies regarding the production of oil and
the distribution of the country's oil wealth--moves that would
have potentially devastating consequences for the US, and indeed
the world, economy. The United States, of course, is fighting
to prevent this from happening.
As the conflict unfolds, we are unlikely to hear
any of this from the key figures involved. In seeking to mobilize
public support for his campaign against the terrorists, President
Bush will never acknowledge that conventional geopolitics plays
a role in US policy. Osama bin Laden, for his part, is equally
reluctant to speak in such terms. But the fact remains that this
war, like the Gulf War before it, derives from a powerful geopolitical
contest. It will be very difficult, in the current political environment,
to probe too deeply into these matters. Bin Laden and his associates
have caused massive injury to the United States, and the prevention
of further such attacks is, understandably, the nation's top priority.
When conditions permit, however, a serious review of US policy
in the Persian Gulf will be in order. Among the many questions
that might legitimately be asked at this point is whether long-term
US interests would not best be served by encouraging the democratization
of Saudi Arabia. Surely, if more Saudi citizens are permitted
to participate in open political dialogue, fewer will be attracted
to the violent, anti-American dogma of Osama bin Laden.
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