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EDITOR'S NOTE
This article was originally
published by the Detroit
Free Press on May 17, 2004 and is reprinted
with the author's permission.
Saudis Out to Help the U.S.,
Not Push for Bush Re-election
By Frank Richter
Bob Woodward's book "Plan
of Attack" gave critics of President George W. Bush a
chance to launch an attack of their own. Their target was Bush's
cozy relationship with the Saudis, something that could become
an election issue. In his book, Woodward reports that just
before the Iraq war, Saudi Ambassador Prince Bandar promised the
president that the Saudis hoped to fine-tune oil prices over 10
months to prime the economy for 2004.
The
president's opponents have tried to characterize this Saudi
statement as some sort of "secret deal" designed to
unfairly help Bush win re-election in 2004 by priming the U.S.
economy with cheap oil.
Woodward also said that Bandar
got a peek at the U.S.-Iraqi war plan, two months prior to the
invasion, and before Secretary of State Colin Powell was
briefed.
The Saudi ambassador and Bush
have both denied any secret deal to lower oil prices for
political purposes. And both Bush and Powell recently said that
the secretary of State had been informed of the president's war
plans far earlier.
Did the Saudis get a heads-up on
the U.S. war plan for Iraq?
The Associated Press recently
revealed that Saudi Arabia was a staging area for U.S. special
operations forces used in the Iraqi invasion. Saudi assistance
allowed the U.S. military to help our Kurdish allies take over
western Iraq, in the first days of the war, preventing Saddam
Hussein from launching Scud missiles against Israel.
After Turkey refused U.S. ground
forces access into northern Iraq, Saudi help became essential to
the war plan. The Saudis allowed the U.S. military to fly
tankers, to refuel warplanes, to fly AWACs planes for
reconnaissance and to maintain command and control of air
operations from nearby Saudi bases. Gen. T. Michael Moseley,
commander of U.S. air operations during the war, called the
Saudis "wonderful partners."
If Vice President Dick Cheney
showed the Saudi ambassador a war map depicting U.S. staging
areas inside his own kingdom, so what? No news here, except for
the news that the Saudis, as usual, came through in the clutch
for America.
For decades, the Americans and
Saudis have worked closely together to defeat the spread of
Iranian fundamentalism in the Gulf and the Russian occupation of
Afghanistan. The U.S.-Saudi alliance kicked Hussein out of
Kuwait in 1991, and Saudi bases were used to command U.S. air
operations against the Taliban after 9/11.
Iraq's enormous debt from the
war with Iran, owed to the rich Arab Gulf states, motivated
Hussein to invade and annex Kuwait for its oil wealth in 1990.
The Gulf War that followed cost the coalition countries $61
billion, much of it paid for by Saudi Arabia. The Gulf War's
cost to the U.S. Treasury was $7 billion, which amounted to a
mere $62 per taxpayer -- thanks to Saudi generosity.
The
Saudi pledge to the United States to keep oil prices low has
been a hallmark of the U.S.-Saudi alliance for decades. The
Saudis pumped more oil to lower oil prices just before the Gulf
War in 1991 and during the buildup to the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
When two of America's major sources of imported oil, Venezuela
and Nigeria, experienced political crises in 2003, the Saudis
increased exports to the United States.
Bandar's promise to keep oil
prices stable to help the U.S. economy was part of a long
standing Saudi pledge to America, not just to Bush. And this
Saudi policy was not designed to help Bush's bid for re-election
in November.
In February, OPEC -- led by the
Saudis -- agreed to decrease, not increase, their oil production
ceiling targets by 10 percent. That decision and insufficient
U.S. refining capacity explain why gasoline prices in the United
States today are near a 13-year high. U.S. elections are only 6
months away. Not much evidence there of a secret deal.
The Saudis recently proposed
that OPEC increase oil production by 1.5 million barrels per
day. That's because terrorists sabotaged an oil pipeline in Iraq
heightening fears of an oil supply security problem.
Is the Saudi proposal part of a
political deal or a response to economic needs? You judge.
Dragging the Saudis into
American politics during an election year is a bad idea. The
Saudis have been America's closest Arab ally in times of war and
peace. The United States cannot afford to lose what few foreign
friends it has in a world troubled by terrorism.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Frank Richter of Detroit
lectures nationwide on terrorism and Middle East policy. He is a
member of the World Affairs Council in Detroit.
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