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The Republican administration of Nixon was prepared to take the risks than be threatened by another Arab oil embargo
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LONDON, January 1 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - The U.S. mulled
military invasion of the Arab
Gulf region to seize oilfields during an oil embargo in 1973, but feared a
possible counter-attack by Iraq
whose vice-president at the time was none other than Saddam Hussein,
said recently declassified British government documents.
Although
the 1973 war – launched by Egypt
and Syria
to end Israeli occupation of Sinai and Golan Heights
- was over after three weeks, a secret assessment drawn up by the
British Joint Intelligence Committee (JIC) -- including the heads of MI5
and MI6 -- concluded Washington was ready to use force to lay hands on oilfields.
Arab
countries decided in October 1973 to impose a complete oil embargo on
the U.S.
over its support for Israel
and slashed down production, sending oil prices sky high.
The
JIC assessment concluded that oilfields seizure was "the
possibility uppermost in American thinking when they refer to the use of
force; it has been reflected, we believe, in their contingency
planning."
According
to the BBC News Online, this came after British Ambassador in Washington
Lord Cromer quoted the then U.S. Defense Secretary James Schlesinger as
saying "it was no longer obvious to him that the United States
could not use force."
The
documents, released under the 30-year-rule for declassification,
indicate that London took the threat so seriously that it drew up a detailed assessment of
what the Americans might do.
Ten-year
Invasion
The
JIC calculated the Americans could guarantee sufficient oil supplies for
themselves and their allies by taking the oilfields in Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait
and the Gulf state of Abu Dhabi, with total reserves of more than 28 billion tons, Agence France-Presse
(AFP).
The
JIC warned the American occupation would need to last 10 years, as the
West developed alternative energy sources, and would result in
"total alienation" of Arabs and much of the rest of the third
world, as well as "domestic dissension" in the U.S.
However,
the committee said the Republican administration of President Richard
Nixon could be prepared to take the risks, if it was faced with the
"dark scenario" of renewed Arab-Israeli conflict and further
protracted oil restrictions.
Iraq
Intervention Fears
The
declassified documents said that although the attacks would not be
fraught with ferocious resistance, given the modest military
capabilities of the would-be invaded countries, the U.S.feared the counter-intervention of then-advanced Iraqi forces to expel
them.
"For
Saudi Arabia, the operation could be fairly straightforward. The peacetime garrison
of Dhahran is one lightly armed National Guard battalion and a Hawk SAM
battery," it said.
"The
initial assault could be made by a brigade tasked to knock out the Hawk
battery, seize the airfield, and so far as possible prevent sabotage to
the oilfields.
"For
Kuwait
the operational problems are greater. The Kuwaitis have about 100 tanks,
mostly concentrated near the airport. This means that although the
initial assault could still be made by a brigade, the assault force
would need to be rapidly reinforced, say within six hours, by tanks of
its own."
A
"complication" in the case of Abu Dhabi was the presence of some seconded British officers in the Abu Dhabi
Defense Force, and for this reason, the JIC said Washington could ask
London to carry out that operation.
The
JIC said that the U.S.would probably give the Soviet Union
prior notice of its intentions, and that Kremlin opposition would
"probably stop short of direct military intervention".
However,
in a reversal of what was actually to happen 18 years later, the JIC
said that if the Americans seized Kuwait, Iraq
may try to mount a counter-invasion to expel them.
"The
greatest risk in the Gulf would probably arise in Kuwait, where the Iraqis, with Soviet backing, might be tempted to
intervene," it said.
The
intelligence also warned that American military intervention could
create strains among the Western allies.
"Since
the United States would probably claim to be acting for the benefit of
the West as a whole and would expect the full support of allies, deep
U.S.-European rifts could ensue," it said.
The
declassified documents said other possibilities, such as the replacement
of Arab rulers by "more amenable" leaders or a show of force
by "gunboat diplomacy", were rejected as unlikely.
The
episode shows how the security of oil supplies is always at the
forefront of governments' planning, commented the BBC.
It
also draws attention to the current situation, as it revives memories of
the U.S.-British cooperation to invade Iraq, that sits on the world’s second largest oil reserves.
War
opponents have long insisted that the war on the oil-rich Arab country
was rather an attempt to keep a tight grip on oil production not only in
Iraq
but the entire Gulf region.
Washington
claimed the war was to dismantle weapons of mass destruction, nothing of
which have
been found so far nine months after occupation and a few weeks of
the capture of ousted president Saddam Hussein.
The
U.S.
has military bases in almost all Gulf countries, including the three
countries it earlier planned to invade, and its companies landed a
majority of contracts there.