The US wants no stable force in the Middle East, no opposition, no
basis for anything that could become a stable economy, exporting oil and
competing with it on the world markets, political analyst Caleb Maupin
told RT.
RT:Obama said
the US troops won't be going back into combat on the ground in
Iraq. Will he keep his promise?
Caleb Maupin: Many US military adventures began
with so-called military advisors. The classic example is Vietnam.
In recent history we have seen many examples of the US using
so-called military advisors to advise local officials who
actually do the fighting on behalf of the US. What’s very clear
in the Iraq situation right now is that the US is attempting to
form a sectarian war, not only in Iraq but in the entire Middle
East. ISIS/ISIL is an organization that receives support from
Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states that ally with the US and have
worked to form and fund this kind of extremist terrorist
organization and send them to Syria, engaging in civil war, and
now they are in Iraq. This fighting is very helpful to the US
because it makes sure that there is no stable opposition to the
US and there are no stable competitors in the world market. The
US wants chaos in the Middle East and this latest episode with
the ISIS and sending advisors is an example of the US achieving
its aim of chaos, fighting and leaving instability in the Middle
East in order to remove competitors in the oil market.
RT: Around 300 so-called military advisers
have been sent by Washington to Iraq. Are they really just
advisers?
CM: Military advisors in Africa and different
parts of the world that the US sends, they generally play the
role of organizing proxy forces, forces that do what the US wants
to be done. They kind of play a central role in directing them,
telling them where to go. 300 military advisors could get quite a
bit done in order to achieve the aims that the Pentagon would
like to achieve. They work with local forces and give them a
direction, that’s what generally the military advisors do.
RT: The US President also stressed the Iraq
crisis should be solved politically… Hasn't the situation already
passed that point?
CM: Absolutely. The US is attempting to ferment
a sectarian civil war throughout the Middle East and it is
achieving it very effectively. The support for ISIS from Saudi
Arabia, the fighting now between the ISIS and the Maliki
government – this is exactly what the US wants. It wants no
stable force in the Middle East, no opposition, no basis for
anything that could become a stable economy, exporting oil and
competing with the US on the world markets. This is the US
getting exactly what it wants.
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