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THE BIG AMERICAN LEAK: WHAT DID WE LEARN FROM THOSE WIKILEAK CABLES? Tom Friedman, NY Times, Dec. 5, 2010

Richard Kigel · Sunday, December 5th 2010 at 11:50AM · 461 views
O.K. I admit it. I enjoy reading other people’s mail as much as the next guy, so going through the WikiLeaks cables has made for some fascinating reading. What’s between the lines in those cables, though, is another matter. It is a rather sobering message. America is leaking power.

Let’s start, though, with what’s in the cables. I think I’ve figured it out: Saudi Arabia and its Arab neighbors want the U.S. to decapitate the Iranian regime and destroy its nuclear facilities so they can celebrate in private this triumph over the hated Persians, while publicly joining with their people in the streets in burning Uncle Sam in effigy, after we carry out such an attack on Iran — which will make the Arab people furious at us. The reason the Arab people will be furious at us, even though many of them don’t like the Persians either, is because they dislike their own unelected leaders even more and protesting against the Americans, who help to keep their leaders in power, is a way of sticking it to both of us.

Are you with me?

While the Saudis are urging us to take out Iran’s nuclear capability, we learn from the cables that private Saudi donors today still constitute the most significant source of funding to Sunni terrorist groups worldwide — not to mention the fundamentalist mosques, charities and schools that spawn the Taliban in Pakistan and Afghanistan. So basically our oil payments are cycled through Saudi Arabia and end up funding the very militants whom our soldiers are fighting. But don’t think we don’t have allies. ... The cables tell us about Ahmed Zia Massoud, an Afghan vice president from 2004 to 2009, who now owns a palatial home in Dubai, where, according to one cable, he was caught by customs officials carrying $52 million in unexplained cash. It seems from these cables that the U.S. often has to pay leaders in Pakistan and Afghanistan to be two-faced — otherwise they would just be one-faced and against the U.S. in both public and private.

Are you still with me?

Yes, these are our allies — people whose values we do not and never will share. “O.K.,” our Saudi, Gulf, Afghan and Pakistani allies tell us, “we may not be perfect, but the guys who would replace us would be much worse. The Taliban and Al Qaeda are one-faced. They say what they mean in public and private: They hate America.”

That’s true, but if we are stuck supporting bad regimes because only worse would follow, why can’t we do anything to make them reform? That brings us to the sobering message in so many of these cables: America lacks leverage. America lacks leverage in the Middle East because we are addicted to oil. We are the addicts and they are the pushers, and addicts never tell the truth to their pushers.

When we import $28 billion a month in oil, we can’t say to the Saudis: “We know the guys who would come after you would be much worse, but why do we have to choose between your misrule and corruption and their brutality and intolerance?” We’re just stuck supporting a regime that, sure, fights Al Qaeda at home, but uses our money to fund a religious ideology, schools, mosques and books that ensure that Al Qaeda will always have a rich pool of recruits in Saudi Arabia and abroad. We also lack leverage with the Chinese on North Korea, or with regard to the value of China’s currency, because we’re addicted to their credit.

Geopolitics is all about leverage. We cannot make ourselves safer abroad unless we change our behavior at home. But our politics never connects the two.

Think how different our conversations with Saudi Arabia would be if we were in the process of converting to electric cars powered by nuclear, wind, domestic natural gas and solar power? We could tell them that if we detect one more dollar of Saudi money going to the Taliban then they can protect themselves from Iran.

Think how different our conversations with China would be if we had had a different savings rate the past 30 years and China was not holding $900 billion in U.S. Treasury securities — but was still dependent on the U.S. economy and technology. We would not be begging them to revalue their currency, and maybe our request that China prevent North Korea from shipping ballistic missile parts to Iran via Beijing airport (also in the cables) wouldn’t be rebuffed so brusquely.

And think how much more leverage our sanctions would have on Iran if oil were $20 a barrel and not $80 — and Iran’s mullah-dictators were bankrupt?

Fifty years ago, the world was shaped in a certain way, to promote certain values, because America had the leverage to shape it that way. We have been steadily losing that leverage because of our twin addictions to Middle East oil and Chinese credit — and the WikiLeaks show just what crow we have to eat because of that. I know, some problems — like how we deal with a failing state like Pakistan that also has nukes — are innately hard, and ending our oil and credit addictions alone will not solve them. But it sure would give us more leverage to do so — and more insulation from the sheer madness of the Middle East if we can’t.

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Richard Kigel Staten Island, NY

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Comments (11)

Richard Kigel Sunday, December 5th 2010 at 11:52AM

What we learned is nothing more than what we already knew through reports from investigative journalists. All of it was widely known--but not acknowledged.

Still, the U.S. finds itself in a predicament--and we need creative solutions. Threats and saber rattling won't work.





Richard Kigel Sunday, December 5th 2010 at 12:15PM

Saint Jake:

Agree!! The point Tom Friedman was making is that because of our addiction to oil, we have no choice BUT to engage with the Saudis. If we were really serious about cutting them loose we would be funding alternative fuel projects like crazy!

As long we are the Saudi's number one bankroller and oil consumer, they have us over a barrel.

Richard Kigel Sunday, December 5th 2010 at 12:53PM

Exactly!!!

That is why I totally agree with your comment to Anita that this may be a good thing.

Richard Kigel Sunday, December 5th 2010 at 1:38PM

Sad.

President Obama is a case in point. Brilliant mind. Forward looking, well thought out policies. And yet...

One observer characterized his administration as a third Bush term lite--with the exception of Health Care and financial regulation, he has been forced to maintain Bush Era policies--the War in Afghanistan, the longest, costliest war in our history, defending an unpopular TARP, a Bush creation, and now he is on the verge of keeping all the Bush Tax cuts.

None of it is anything he would do or support if he had free reign to institute his own policies. But he has to operate with both hands tied behind his back.

Sad...

Richard Kigel Sunday, December 5th 2010 at 5:56PM

Excellent analysis, Clark.

Some of the commentary and analysis I have read recently echoes exactly the points you have made.

Did you seee Frank Rich's piece today? I don't know if any of the Chicago papers carry him--he is a regular Sunday NY Times Op-Ed columnist. For years he has been one of the most astute observers of the political and social scene in the country. He has been a long time Obama supporter--but a little more progressive.

In order for the President to succeed, he has to have voices like Frank Rich in his corner.

Well, today, his column made some devastating points criticizing the President for exactly the same reasons you did. And his predicitons for future success were bleak indeed.

Basically, he was calling Obama naiive for trusting too long in his bipartisanship efforts in the face of outright defiance and disrespect.

It was disheartening to me, someone who wants the President to succeed.

I'll post it here. Love to know what you think.

Richard Kigel Sunday, December 5th 2010 at 10:14PM

Irma--

Funny...you are so right. We ARE trying to do the best we can to hit rock bottom. We could not be doing any better if we had it all planned!

I like you biblical quote--whatever is said in the dark will come into the light.

Steve Williams Sunday, December 5th 2010 at 11:53PM

I think the President is neither naive or weak. Nor innocent, but how many of us are? What it all comes back to is corporate culture, and how many Americans buy into this? Or is it inevitable, and we have no choice?

ROBINSON IRMA Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM

Hey Rich, what do you think would happen if wikileaks show a documentary that was shown a long time ago about how in te millde of the ocean gas drums are moved when one spot to another thus raising th eprice of oil now this was before they started just writting the upper oil prices on paper napkins to send the pricce at the pump us...oh and lets not forget why America have the majority of thier oil wells wit caps on them???

I wonder what would happen if we really started to learn or just pay attention when things like these are shown to us as they are???? (nup)

as for me..I will just continue to accept we in this country have not yet hit rock bottom eventough we do the best we can to get there sooner than later. NUP) but I am relaxed as what is done in teh dark will surely come to the light, remember? lol (smile)

ROBINSON IRMA Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM

@Clark, me I believe our leaders do step forward to collect their lobby checks...checks they have honestly earned the same way they always do. example...

THEY ARE GOING TO GET, UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE EXTENTION ALONG WITH THE bUSH TAXES EXTENTION AND THE PEACE TREATY WITH RUSSIA THE WAS IT REGAN PUT INTO PLACE(?)...pUTIN WILL GET BACK IN POWER AND COMMUNISM CAN RETURN AND GET SOME OF TAHT MEGA BUCKS THAT ONLY NOW GOES TO THE DRUG CARTELS AND THE OTHER RUSSIAN MOB BOSSES...AM "i" CORRECT ON THIS ONE ALSO ???LOL (SMILE)

ROBINSON IRMA Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM

Is there any reason besides politics and lobby in bed together do we not get any oil from Iraq or is it just exclusive reserved for China now that the oil is not owned byt the STATE?????

OH WELL, THE ONLY PERSON BUILDING ANY OIL REFINIRES IN aMERICA IS THE DICTATOR OF bRAZIL...NOPE ...DIDN'T GET THIS FROM WIKILEAKS,,,GOT IT OFF OF MSNBC DURING HURRICANE KATRINA AND ALL OF THE TALK ABOUT HARM TO REFINERIES THERE...ONLY IN AMERICA...(NUP)

ROBINSON IRMA Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM

...OOPS, NOT bRAZIL...but the country with the funny long name whose dictator said in his speech at the U.N. that Bush stunk...he is bussom buddys with Iran and Russia also. (smile)

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