pandemonium  britannia  watch 


No. 513

23/01/03

One-quarter of British army 

sent for war vs. Iraq

 
Comments of Franz J. T. Lee.


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Friends, Amigos, Folks,

Why  “the right group of forces for the sort of tasks that may be necessary”
?
What are the "necessary tasks" against Iraq?  Against Venezuela?

One thing is what is part of the "oil wars", another thing is what is part and parcel of the current, global "new wars".  Well, compared to the past ones, what is "new" about the current Pentagon-NATO wars? It cannot be "oil", because this is obsolete, as antiquated as British imperialism itself. Furthermore, you don't need a quarter of the British forces, in communion with the American war arsenal, to attack a small country, ravaged by war, and that has no "weapons of mass destruction".  

So, what´s going on? What´s broiling?  
Also, why the massive total economic war against Venezuela? Only for its "oil"?
Don't we know that within 50 years, no cock will crow thrice about oil  anymore?
And, did the USA, across its CIA control of PDVSA, in any case, not possess Venezuelan oil all the time already?

Infowarfare strategy veils "classified, confidential plans" for 50 years, mostly, forever. So, what´s at stake?  What´s the stake?  Why are millions marching today in Caracas, all over Venezuela, defending the Bolivarian Revolution for Humanity? Why are the "
Desert Rats" in the Gulf? Well, why is the sky the limit?  

Hegel said it, the Whole is the Truth, the Truth is the Whole. And, there is still much, much more about this Whole Truth, or Truthful Whole. Everything that comes into existence merits to fade away into oblivion.  

Over the last decades, dozens and dozens of times, in chats, debates, correspondence, specifically we have answered all the questions above already. Just visit our home pages and forums to verify this.  Let me quote an example in Spanish, as we do not have an English translation as yet.
See: http://www.geocities.com/juttafranz/publications00001.html


Jutta wrote:

"Según el  Reporte sobre el Desarrollo Humano de las Naciones Unidas del año 2000, el ingreso del 1 % más rico de la población mundial es equivalente al ingreso combinado del 57 por ciento más pobre.  Los países miembros de la OECD poseen aproximadamente el 97 % de los patentes o derechos de propiedad intelectual en el mundo, y a los consorcios transnacionales les toca el 90 % de todos los patentes directamente relacionados a la tecnología y a los productos de consumo.  Una investigación realizada por Sarah Anderson y John Cavanagh, que compara las ganancias anuales de grandes consorcios con el producto interno bruto de determinados países individuales demuestra, que, por ejemplo, el consorcio norteamericano General Motors es más grande que Dinamarca, el consorcio Wal-Mart más grande que Noruega, y el consorcio General Electric más grande que Portugal. La misma investigación comprueba, que en el año 2000, las ganancias acumuladas de los 500 consorcios más grandes del mundo fueron equivalentes al 47 % del producto social bruto del mundo entero, mientras que el porcentaje de la fuerza laboral empleada por los mismos 500 consorcios sólo llegó a un 1,59 % de la fuerza de trabajo total global. 

La persona individual más rica de los EEUU posee bienes con un valor equivalente a los bienes conjuntos del 40 % de la población más pobre dentro de los mismos EEUU. La fortuna de los tres individuos más ricos del mundo es más grande que el producto social bruto conjunto de los 48 países más pobres del mundo, que conforman un cuarto de las naciones enteras del mundo. Los 225 individuos más ricos del mundo, de los cuales 60 viven en EEUU, poseen en su conjunto una fortuna de más de $1,000,000,000,000 (1000 billones de dólares americanos), monto, el cual corresponde al ingreso combinado anual del 47 % de la población mundial. Los 447 individuos más ricos del mundo poseen en su conjunto una fortuna, que es más grande que la fortuna combinada de todos aquellos, que conforman la mitad pobre de la población mundial."

" ...
El balance hecho por la Resolución Global del Desarrollo Sustentable de los últimos 25 años del auge y  establecimiento de la fase de la globalización con respecto a aquél, lo que hemos señalado anteriormente como la marginalización global de la fuerza de trabajo física, demuestra un dramático incremento de la pobreza con una cifra de desempleo a nivel mundial que asciende a casí 1,000,000,000 (1 billón) de personas.  Los aspectos sociales de esta catástrofe se expresan, entre otras cosas, en una represión intensificada de los así llamados „grupos minoritarios“, socialmente discriminados como las minorías étnicas, inmigrantes, mujeres y grupos indígenas alrededor del mundo. En lo que concierne a los primeros dos, las minorías étnicas y los inmigrantes, la resolución consta:

En muchas partes del mundo, los inmigrantes y las minorías étnicas y raciales no sólo se ven expuestos a la explotación, sino están siendo abusados como chivos expiatorios para los problemas económicos causados por la globalización de los consorcios.“"


Jutta concludes:

"Ahora bien, en este contexto aparece lo que hemos denominado la función objetiva que tiene, en este caso, el racismo a nivel mundial y a la cual haremos referencia más amplia en relación con la función objetiva del terrorismo en lo que sigue en adelante. Por ahora sea indicado la necesidad indispensable que adquieren la existencia del racismo, y también del terrorismo para el proceso histórico de trabajo en esta su etapa globalizada, donde se hace cada vez más necesario una justificación como también un consenso internacional para eliminar los centenares de millones de „fuerzas de trabajo inútiles“ a nivel mundial, engendrados por este mismo proceso. "
See:  http://www.geocities.com/juschmi/publications00012.html .

Clearly we explained the transition from Production to another mode, to creative, creating Transcendence, i. e., the transvolution towards Creation. We explained in detail the quintessence of this last mode of production, its economic exploitation (capitalism & imperialism), its political domination (the State, democracy), social discrimination (racism), military annihilation ("new wars") and human alienation and destruction (holocaust, fascism, genocide, massacres of billions of obsolete physical labour forces).

This is why the Desert Rats and Noble Eagles are in the Gulf, this is why the USA back the racist, fascist murderers of Venezuela, the "Carlos" Gang, their economic sabotage, their political nazism, their Ku-Klux Klan racism,  their sell-out of PDVSA,  their aggressive diatribes for civil war and foreign military intervention, their cold-blooded, murderous calculation of innocent deaths to foster their heinous globalized aims, in macabre tune with  European-US Globofascism. 

In a nut-shell, what´s happening, what´s broiling, massively aided by fascist mass psychology and infowarfare, is the mass destruction of billions of already  value-less, obsolete physical labour forces, and the corresponding infra- and supra-structures, with US-European sophisticated ABCDE weapons of mass destruction, eventually leaving a dead planet behind, to advance towards a new, genetically engineered, cloned species, towards Space Colonization and Militarization, using Tesla Technology, Scalar Waves, etc.
 It´s all as simple as all that!!


Franz J. T. Lee
23/01/03.
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One-quarter of British army 

sent for war vs. Iraq

By Julie Hyland
23 January 2003


One-quarter of Britain’s armed forces are being moved to the Gulf in preparation for war against Iraq, the Blair government announced Monday, January 20.

Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon told parliament that up to 31,000 military personnel, including 29,000 ground troops, are to be deployed to the region in the next weeks.

Although the government had previously made clear its intention to join a US-led war against Iraq, the scale of its military commitment far exceeds expectations, and is larger than that mobilised by the UK during the 1991 Gulf War. Some 8,000 UK personnel, part of a naval task force led by HMS Ark Royal, are already on their way to the region to join US forces.

The “deployment of forces on this scale is no ordinary measure,” Hoon told MPs, but they would provide “the right group of forces for the sort of tasks that may be necessary.”

The additional forces include the 7th Armoured Brigade (the Desert Rats), the 4th Armoured Brigade and the 1st (UK) Armoured Division headquarters, and paratroopers from the 16 Air Assault Brigade. These are to be stationed at bases in Turkey, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia, with the Royal Navy in the Gulf of Bahrain, and possibly Qatar. Some 120 Challenger tanks, made ready for desert conditions to the cost of £100 million, as well as 150 armoured personnel carriers, are also being readied for transportation.

The scale of the commitment is in line with demands from Britain’s military leaders, many of whom had previously expressed misgivings over US war plans, fearing they would destabilise the entire Middle East. According to reports, Britain’s military chiefs had insisted with the government that if they were to participate in such a venture alongside the US, a larger force was required, so as to ensure some degree of independence and control over events.

Hoon cynically claimed that the deployment did not mean war was inevitable. It was simply aimed at “building up pressure” on Iraq, he declared. “A decision to employ force has not been taken, nor is such a decision imminent or inevitable,” he said.

In reality the military buildup is a clear indication that Britain and the US are determined to go to war.

Plans for the military occupation of the country—which would be the largest since the takeover of Japan and Germany in 1945—are well advanced. The Daily Mirror reported that British military strategists have been told a full-scale invasion force must be in place by February 15. Military sources told the newspaper that the plan is to conduct 14 days of intensive air bombardment against the country, followed by a two-pronged attack by land and sea. From Kuwait a massive invasion force would “‘ring fence’ oil installations in the southern tip of Iraq and in the south west and north east. Once Basra is isolated and the oilfields secured, the US would push towards Baghdad,” the Mirror said.

Such a scenario was given additional weight by the US announcement—just hours after Hoon’s statement to parliament—that it was sending a further 37,000 personnel to the Gulf, in addition to the 150,000 it had previously committed. Already hundreds of warplanes and five nuclear-powered “super dreadnoughts,” each more than 1,100 feet long and capable of carrying 70-plus aircraft and more than 10,000 marines, are in the region.

There is a flagrantly provocative character to the US/UK announcements, which came just days before United Nations weapons inspectors are due to make their first report on Iraq’s alleged “weapons of mass destruction” on January 27. Chief UN weapons inspector Hans Blix has said previously that the team requires more time to complete its investigations and has admitted that it has found no evidence that Iraq is stockpiling weapons.

But the US has made it clear that no extra time will be forthcoming, and that a “smoking gun” is not required to justify attacking Iraq. Such statements, coupled with the scale and speed of the military buildup now underway in the Gulf, have raised fears in European capitals that America intends to use the January 27 deadline to trigger war, and present other countries with a fait accompli.

Certainly the announcement of extra troops came just hours after a meeting of the United Nations Security Council had exposed sharp differences amongst its members over the future course of action, with Germany and France making clear their opposition to any military assault on Iraq not explicitly sanctioned by the UN.

Germany’s Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer told the meeting that his government could not support military action taken without UN approval because, “in addition to disastrous consequences for long-term regional stability, we also fear possible negative repercussions for the joint fight against... murderous terrorism.”

French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin indicated that France would use its veto on the Security Council to block any military action whilst UN weapons inspectors continued their investigation of Iraq’s military capabilities. “We believe that, today, nothing justifies military action,” de Villepin stated.

Their concerns were dismissed by Colin Powell, US Secretary of State, who told the meeting that the UN must not be scared into “impotence” and abdicate its responsibility “to disarm” Iraq. He was backed by British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, who argued that the US/UK had all the authorisation required for a military attack—pointing to paragraph 13 of the Security Council’s Resolution 1441, passed in November 2002, which stipulates that Iraq faces “serious consequences” if it is considered to have breached UN resolutions.

For the past months Prime Minister Tony Blair has sought to portray himself as a mediator between Europe and America over preparations for war against Iraq—keeping the former on line, and the latter in check. With the Bush administration making clear it will not be subject to any form of international control, however, and that it will go to war in the near future regardless of the consequences, he has decided to jump aboard the US juggernaut.

It is a high-risk gamble. Whilst the prime minister has the support of the Conservative opposition and much of the media, his war mongering is at odds with the vast majority of the British population—81 percent of whom are opposed to a unilateral attack on Iraq. War, especially one taken in defiance of UN protocol, will immediately expose just how isolated Blair really is.

At the same time, the government is involved in a confrontation with the country’s 50,000 plus firefighters, who embarked on their third strike on Monday. The 24-hour strike is to be followed by two further 48-hour stoppages on January 28 and February 1 in pursuit of the firefighters demand for a pay rise to bring their salaries up to £30,000 per annum.

Blair has dismissed the pay claim and insisted that any wage rise is dependent on thousands of job cuts and the closure of stations. But with 19,000 soldiers being used to provide emergency fire cover during the strike, the Conservatives, the media and sections of the military are demanding that Blair outlaw the dispute and utilize police to break picket lines.

Whatever the exact course of events, the Blair government has committed itself to fighting a war on two fronts—against the Iraqi people overseas and the working class at home.

See Also:
Blair warns United Nations has no veto over US-led war vs. Iraq
[18 January 2003]
The political issues in the struggle against war
[17 January 2003]
On eve of US war against Iraq: the political challenge of 2003
[6 January 2003.] 
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2003/jan2003/uk-j23.shtml
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