Doctor of Economic
Sciences and expert on world global economy.
Vice-president
of the organisation Justícia I Pau, Arcadi Oliveras is a
professor in the Department of Applied Economics at the Universitat
Autònoma de Barcelona. He also lectures on numerous M.Sc. and
post-graduate courses and is president of the General Commission, a
sort of co-ordinating body of all Justícia i Pau organisations
in Spain.
. . .Oil is the reason for war. Over
the past two months Spanish involvement in the oil world has been
predominantly fixed on the clean up operation following the oil
tanker crash off the Costa de Morte in Galicia. Lies and untruths
followed in the wake of news of the Prestige disaster.
First:
when the ship sank, a logical question to ask might have been: Who
owned the oil? It seems obvious that if the oil was being
transported in such precarious conditions- in a boat without a double
hull, under a veil of convenience- it was because whoever owned it
wanted to avoid paying regular transport costs. The answer to the
question is: a Swiss company called Crown Resources. However, Crown
Resources is merely a front for the real owner and 100% holder of all
the shares in the company, which turns out to be a Russian company by
the name of Alpha Group. The same company is extremely important in
Russia and is presided over by a man named Mikhail?.., who for many
years employed a worker by the name of Vladimir Putin. Since then,
Alpha Group has maintained friendly relations with their ex-employee.
Some weeks ago- many months after the Prestige disaster- the Russian
government put a significant quantity of its Siberian oil resources
up for sale. Alpha Group acquired the reserves without having to
increase their bid in the auction, due precisely to an agreement made
with the Russian government whereby it obtained the oil for 60% of
the issue price. This is a company that is powerful not only in
Russia but also in the U.S.
Alpha Group was granted a one
million dollar credit line by a bank named Export-Import Bank thanks
to the efforts of a representative by the name of Dick Cheney,
current U.S. vice president. Upon learning of the loans Alpha Group
was assailed by generosity and donated two million dollars to a
certain George Bush to finance an election campaign. Alpha Group also
supported another election campaign in the past- that of Mr. Boris
Yeltsin.
In the end the promised loans
were never handed over to Export-Import Bank, because a Russian woman
who cut a very powerful figure in the American government at the
time, occupying the position of Secretary of State, completely
opposed it. Her name was Madelaine Albright and she announced it was
unacceptable to grant a loan to a company that was trafficking heroin
on a regular basis. This was the company that owned the oil.
But the owner had a business
partner in Switzerland who granted him premises in which to register
the company Crown Resources. Said friend was none other than Marc
Rich, a Spanish national. Around 1979 or 1980, Marc Rich was
convicted and sentenced to prison in Spain for his systematic
involvement in arms trafficking. He avoided prison with the help of a
very influential friend in Madrid called Pío Cabanillas. It
turns out that Rich later returned to prison in New York where he
again faced charges of arms trafficking. This time he was pardoned by
a plea presented to the courts by two important individuals, one of
whom was Bill Clinton, the other, Juan Carlos I.
The
second question is: who owned the boat? A family of Greek
shipowners by the name of Coloutos. The family owns a very old fleet
of boats that through lack of reinvestment has become a slowly
sinking business. The family has reached a point whereby some family
members have had to source work outside the family business, a
non-too usual event. One of the family members working outside the
family circle is employed in the European Union and currently
occupies the position of personal assistant to Loyola de Palacio
The
third question is: who owned the boats that went to the aid of
the Prestige in order to avoid the catastrophe? This person is
actually very well known for having been President of the Association
of Spanish Business Enterprises for many years. He goes by the name
of Fernando Fernández Tapias, or "Fefé"- a
regular figure on the madrileño social scene, he is a business
man par excellence, vice president of the Madrid Business
Confederation, vice president of Real Madrid and business partner of
Mr. Marc Rich in many of his enterprises. The day the boat sank, said
gentleman was to be found hunting in the province of Toledo with Mr.
Manuel Fraga Iribarne. It should be noted that this hunting trip was
organised by the president of El Corte Inglés, who immediately
informed the entire media that any mention of his name in connection
with the trip would produce severe repercussions, in terms of a
withdrawal of all future advertising.
Now I am going to deviate
slightly from the topic. In November we were all very much affected
by the images of several Argentinean children from the Tucumán
province, suffering from malnutrition and on the point of death from
starvation. Some of these kids died. At Christmas I had the
opportunity to speak to an Argentinean journalist who went on to tell
me that these children were not actually the first to die from hunger
in Argentina. Rather, the same had happened in the province of
Neuquén in 1996. In said province a significant proportion of
the wealth is generated by oil exploitation activities. Recently an
Argentinean company called Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales,
which operates a monopoly in the Argentina oil industry, merged with
the company REPSOL. Since then it operates by the name of REPSOL-YPF.
Around the time of the merger REPSOL decided to make half the YPF
workforce redundant without compensation, consequently leaving the
population in a precarious famine situation. The current president of
REPSOL Alfonso Cortina is the son of Francoist minister Pedro
Cortina, and brother to Alberto Cortina, who was another member of
the hunting party in Toledo, together with Fraga, Fernández
Tapias, and event organiser, el Corte Inglés.
The
fourth point relates to the government?s announcement of an
expert secretary of State responsible for resolving the Prestige
disaster. The named secretary is a person called Rodolfo Martín
Villa. Villa and I were both students around the same time. The only
difference that separated us was that he was president of the Spanish
Students? Union. In theory this union represented all the Spanish
universities but in practice it was a union composed of Francoists.
His position helped him to forge a political career later on, which
led to him becoming Civil Governor of Barcelona among other things.
In 1972, while Villa was still employed as Civil Governor, some
friends and I decided to create a residents association in our
neighbourhood called "la Izquierda del Ensanche" or ?the
Eixample Left?. (...). Our association failed to receive
recognition in the Statutes, based on Villa?s decision: "its
not a question of statutes, but your name, you are called LEFT, it
makes no difference whether it is Eixample, it?s still the LEFT ".
And with this he denied our association authorisation. We launched an
appeal hoping his superior would modify the result. His superior at
the time was the Governing Minister (equivalent to a Minister for the
Interior), and thus the appeal came to his notice. However we were
unlucky with our appeal in the sense that by the time it reached
Madrid, Martín Villa had become Minister of the Interior and
it was defeated once again. This is the person who has been appointed
official figure responsible for resolving the Prestige situation. He
is also someone who has led a great financial career. When he was
made president of ENDESA he bought the holding company with a
monopoly to supply electricity in Chile. He realised that Chile had
insufficient electricity production and resolved to construct
reservoirs as a means of best resolving the problem. Having made his
decision he chose to put his plan into action and thus called up a
couple of geologists to indicate where the reservoirs should best be
located. They answered by pointing to a map, signalling an area that
happened to be territory occupied by a Mapuche Indian reserve and
thus registered in the constitution. However Mr. Martín Villa,
a man of minor scruples declared, "Mapuches out! I have to
locate a reservoir? " and he offered the Mapuches alternative
land which had the advantage of lying under cover of snow for
nine months a year. Clearly they refused. In response to their
protests Martín Villa had the police intervene to throw them
off the earmarked land. But he was not the outright winner in the
debacle. The Mapuches went on to sue Villa. One day upon arriving at
the border of the country to pay a visit to his electricity company,
he was advised not to cross the border because if he did he would be
detained and taken directly into custody. This is the person charged
with finding a solution to the Prestige disaster.
ON
THE WAR IN IRAQ
In
matters of war the public is always misled. We are never informed of
what we should be. Seven or eight months ago a small peasant
residing in Moncloa decided to convene a number of journalists and
NGO representatives to join him in the act of destroying the last
Spanish landmine. It is common knowledge that the same person
approved an international treaty prohibiting landmines- a treaty
signed by Spain but not by the U.S. Mr. Aznar thought it would be a
positive move, electorally-speaking, to show that he supported the
treaty and so he gathered together journalists and NGOs and took
everyone off to a quarry close to Madrid to perform a symbolic
gesture of destroying the last Spanish landmine. A few days later I
was to have the opportunity to speak to a representative of a Spanish
NGO who had been present at the event. He told me of how he had been
talking to some of the military figures attending the event, who
informed him of the fact that the symbolic landmine was not actually
the last landmine, but far from it. The government was holding on to
many more and this act was simply an election ruse. This is an issue
of major importance, which I would have preferred to learn via the
daily newspapers and their relevant reports. The first thing the
newspapers would have told us is the name of the company that
destroyed the mines: a company called Fabricaciones Extremeñas.
We would also have found out the identity of the company responsible
for manufacturing the mines? Another company called Explosivos
Alaveses. And the owner of Explosivos Alaveses is none other than the
owner of Fabricaciones Extremeñas, a company called Unión
Española de Explosivos. The latter is currently owned by a
Dutch-financed holding company. However seven or eight years ago,
when it was still producing mines it was owned by a Spanish company
called Ercros. At the time the head of Ercros was a man called Josep
Piqué. The newspapers might also have told us that the
president was actually destroying landmines that his Minister for
Foreign Affairs, Josep Piqué, had once been involved in
manufacturing and that his motivations were not business related (I
don?t believe he ever acted out of such motivation) but political,
in the sense that he was a front man for one of the most powerful
criminals to ever come out of Catalonia: Javier de la Rosa.
Javier
de la Rosa?s life story is the stuff of fiction, but I will save
myself by recounting only one chapter. It concerns Javier de la
Rosa?s father- Antonio de la Rosa- who died 25 years ago. As
normally happens, his funeral was celebrated and the relevant
obituaries were published. Here normality ends. Curiously enough a
couple of years after the death of Antonio a friend bumped into him
on the street- a non too common occurrence. The friend went on to ask
him what had happened, how could Antonio be alive and walking the
streets when he had attended his funeral twenty years earlier?
Antonio?s response was "the crime I committed took place so
long ago that by now it has expired and I can show my face on the
street again?. So with a father as shrewd as this it was inevitable
that his son would grow up equally so. His son is none other than the
shrewd individual who proposed Josep Piqué as Secretary of
State.
The
second item I want to explain concerns another character I believe is
also worth identifying: Vladimir Putin, a man I have already spoken
about. A few months ago there was an incident involving some Chechen
terrorists - who invaded Moscow Theatre. The story had a happy ending
(well, it remains to be clarified), but in any case, Mr. Putin sent
in the army and cleverly left the matter there. There are two
things that must be pointed out: 1. when Mr. Putin
presented himself for presidential election in Russia, three years
ago, predictions showed he had 5% of the vote; which is not quite
enough to win the elections. Around the same time, three attacks
coincidentally took place on three buildings in Moscow, killing 300
people. Putin, who was Prime Minister at the time came on television
to announce that the attacks had been perpetrated by Chechen rebels
and that if he succeeded in becoming President he would put a stop to
these attacks; he declared he would take a hard line against the
Chechens and promised the Muscovites a return to peace. Afterwards
predictions shot up spectacularly, giving Putin 55% of the estimated
vote, representing a percentage that could in fact win him the
elections. Subsequently he was announced President of Russia. Shortly
afterwards we learned that the three bombs had not been planted by
Chechen terrorists but by the KGB, which Putin had headed up until a
few months prior to the elections. This is the first item of
information. The second item concerns the fact that the worst
repression Chechens have suffered has been instigated not by Putin
but by Yeltsin and especially by his Minister for Defence, who
systematically bombarded the Chechen capital between 1994 and 1995.
On one occasion a very specific form of repression occurred. He
accused Chechens of entering a Russian factory site and destroying
over a hundred tanks. He announced that the civilian Chechen
community would have to pay for their support that was the spur to
the terrorists actions. Afterwards we learned that the tanks had not
been stolen at all but that the Defence Minister had deregistered
them and had later sold them at a personal profit to Milosevic who
employed them in the War in Yugoslavia. Yeltsin knew this, just like
he knew to ask Putin to pass a new law when he came into power,
called the final point law. Said law would release both Yeltsin and
his Minister for Defence from any wrongdoing. Putin was only too
happy to sign the law, as it would also free him from his
biographical history, which was described in detail in Le Monde the
day he acceded to the Presidency of Russia. During the period in
which Putin was director general of the KGB he formed part of the
Board of Directors of a Russian company with registered offices in
Germany. The business mission of the company in question was
assassinations on demand, which made Putin the head of a company of
hired assassins who operated around the globe. This gentleman came to
power as President of Russia. With his brave methods he then
attempted to solve the Moscow Theatre problem by pumping poisonous
chemicals prohibited by all international conventions, into the
theatre. Then when everyone started to feel a bit "groggy"
he sent in his soldiers to fire bullets into the heads of fifty
Chechen terrorists. This, as far as I can see, amounts to
assassination. World leaders congratulated Putin and King Juan Carlos
sent him a telegram praising the firm way he handled the whole
affair.
In
1931 Great Britain ceded independence to Iraq, slicing up what was
historically Iraqi territory in the process and awarding only the
larger part independence. The smaller part was refused independence
for another thirty years (1961). This part is known as Kuwait.
Britain?s severing policy in effect meant that Iraqi access to the
sea to extract oil was blocked. Since 1931 this matter was a source
of historical complaint by subsequent Iraqi governments. However it
was not afforded any major importance until 1961 or 1962 when Kuwait
regained independence- following this event the then President of
Iraq Abdel Kharim, claimed it for Iraq. Nothing more than a claim was
ever made. Later Hussein (1990) (let it be clearly understood that
Saddam Hussein is an entirely cold blooded criminal and murderer, and
I am not attempting to defend or praise him in any way) decided to
follow through with the annexing of Kuwait. On the 30th of July 1990
he telephoned the US Ambassador to Baghdad (because despite
everything he knew what he was getting into) and he said "Ms.
ambassador, I?m thinking of invading Kuwait tomorrow, what do you
think?). The lady ambassador?s reply was that that particular day
happened to be the 31st of July which was the date she traditionally
took her annual holidays, just like Saddam. Hussein interpreted said
reply as north American authorisation to invade Kuwait and the
following day a war began which saw Kuwait become part of Iraq within
two days. But despite the lady ambassador being on holiday, the
president back home- a certain George Bush senior- was still working,
and the Kuwait affair, among others, was something that particularly
concerned him. So when he learned that it had been invaded, he
suffered what I like to call "an international rights crisis".
He declared that international laws concerning Kuwait had to be
respected. He could just as easily have suffered a crisis of
international rights in relation to the Sahara region?s occupation
by Morocco, or in relation to Palestine, which was occupied by Israel
or East Timor, which was occupied by Indonesia but clearly he didn?t.
The reason: Kuwait had oil and the others hadn?t. Mr. George Bush
senior is an oil man. Before he became president of the US government
he was acting vice president, performing presidential functions due
to the fact that for many years a Hollywood actor who laughed a lot
but understood very little occupied the presidential role. Bush had
previously been ambassador to China, and the director general of the
CIA (which is no lowly position) and he had also been involved in
business- the oil business to be exact. His partner was a man called
James Baker who would later go on to become secretary of state and
help his friend through the Gulf War. All the above combined to exact
a special preoccupation in George W. Bush for oil. It also ran in his
family. His father and grandfather (who was in prison in connection)
and his great grandfather had all been involved in oil. The Bush
family comes 7th in the list of U.S. families with the biggest
interest in the oil world. The Bush family is the family that started
the Gulf War. Outcome: 270 American soldiers dead, 270,000 Iraqi
soldiers and a million children dead as a result of sanctions on
medication and basic food for over ten years. Saddam Hussein was
never deposed and Kuwait never became a democratic state as was
promised. What was intended was achieved: the stationing of North
American troops in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait for over ten years (where
they still remain), to keep watch on the oil extracted by these
countries. This was the first phase: the attempt made by George Bush
senior. He was succeeded by president Bill Clinton, who throughout
his mandate as president showed no special interest in the whole oil
area; it is common knowledge that he devoted his time to other types
of activity and that oil was therefore not a fundamental matter. The
years passed and the oil situation remained more or less stable,
until Clinton was unable to present himself for election a third
time. New elections took place in the U.S. and Al Gore was the
victor. But, given that he was not the man the establishment wanted,
the votes in Florida were tampered with, the elections were rigged
and a man with 138 death sentences behind him as governor of Texas,
went on to take up the position of president of the Government. The
debate on the legality of issuing a death penalty remains very much
alive, while the view on signing one certainly points to it being a
crime. This means that firstly we have George Bush acting as
illegitimate president of the U.S. and secondly acting as an assassin
138 times. To complete the description we should add that, like his
father, he had a special interest in the oil industry. He too had an
oil business- not with James Baker who was his father?s partner,
but with a partner who turns out to be the brother of a certain Osama
Bin Laden. Later on Bin Laden is accused of destroying the twin
towers and Bush says this cannot be allowed to happen, that he will
bomb the whole area in which these criminals are hiding. The months
that have passed since then have shown that for the most part the
terrorists were to be found hiding in Florida, California, Salou and-
we?ve just been informed- in Gerona. But as Bush couldn?t
realistically bomb California or Florida, he decided to bomb
Afghanistan and an entire unfortunate population that had nothing to
do with the matter. More people have been killed as a result of
bombing missions in Afghanistan than died in the September 11th
attacks and Bush has yet to express a single word of remorse. He
achieved what he set out to, which was not to find Bin Laden (this
was not an objective because had he been found alive, he would have
spilled the beans, and things would have been horrendous for Bush).
However he did manage to position North American troops in
Afghanistan, Uzbekistan and ...kistan. Now troops stationed in these
locations are keeping a close eye on oil extraction in the Caspian
Sea, the second most important oil reserve in Asia. This remains
highlighted in a recent photograph of three smiling presidents in
front of a pipeline running between friendly Western nations that
will transport oil to the west. This was Bush?s intention when he
began the war in Afghanistan. It had nothing to do with September
11th.
What is certain is that this
pipeline will be manufactured by a North American company by the name
of Haly Burton; a company which up until 3 years ago was headed by
Dick Cheney, current U.S. vice president. It should also be noted
that a while ago we learned of the existence of what comes under the
banner of ?American Schools?, in Panama and the U.S. Basically
these are schools attended by criminals who have the potential to go
on to become coup plotters and who are trained by the North American
army in various countries in Latin America. I have learned that the
U.S. has just finished building a second such ?American School?
in an operating plant in Hungary and that there they are training
Asian soldiers who may one day end up supporting dictatorships and
coups in their respective countries. And the American School in
Hungary reflects the changes that have evolved in the administration
over time. Today the school employs only North American instructors,
and infrastructure (houses, food, petrol, etc.) has been privatised
and outsourced to a North American company by the name of Haly
Burton.
The Gulf War represented the
first phase of war, Afghanistan the second and now we await the third
phase. This matter has yet to be disclosed as a result of the
reluctance that Bush seems to have encountered.
In any event, Bush is very much
looking forward to starting a third war. What is clear is that his
activities have nothing whatsoever to do with peace for the Iraqi
people, who are only beginning to emerge from a Saddam-led
dictatorship. Nor do they relate to the Afghanis, who were released
from the Taliban regime (because if anyone looked at their current
situation, he or she would realise that the Afghani people are worse
off now than they ever were under the Taliban). What matters is
winning the oil, because the U.S. needs oil. Strictly it doesn?t
need oil, as it has Texas and other enormous reserves in Alaska but
it wants to keep these until the rest of the world?s reserves have
been exhausted and it can then supply oil at the price it dictates.
At the moment this is what matters. Mexico (cancelled foreign debt)
and Venezuela are also relevant (one point: some months ago there was
an ephemeral coup d´Etat in Venezuela, which resulted in
Carmona coming to power. Carmona was the president of the Association
of Venezuelan Business Enterprises and just fifteen days prior to the
coup d?Etat he had visited G. Bush senior). The other interest in
Latin America lies in Ecuador, a country the U.S. wants to reach by
crossing Columbia, with the excuse of a plan to eradicate the
cultivation of drugs. The same excuse affords the U.S. a reason for
entering Ecuador, checking out Colombia and keeping an eye on Brazil,
which is turning into a dangerous country.
That is how the Latin American
outlook appears. Now let us move on to another key area with plenty
of oil: Saudi Arabia, a country that the U.S. has lately been less
inclined to trust. Although appearances reflect a lack of trust,
practice reveals that Saudi Arabia continues to be the principal
buyer of arms from the U.S. The lack of trust may be explained by the
support shown for groups such as Al Qaeda in addition to the question
of succession, which is on the brink of becoming very relevant. In
1952, when Saudi Arabia gained independence, Abdel Asís was
declared King. The law clearly stipulated that his successor would
have to be chosen from among his offspring, a fact that failed to
ignite concern, given that he fathered 37 children. This meant that
all subsequent Kings were chosen from among a series of brothers.
King Fad currently reigns (although whether one can say he actually
reigns is not certain, as he is in Marbella where King Juan Carlos
visits him regularly) and his successor should be son Abdullah, aged
77. The next youngest is his sultan brother, aged 75. Thus the line
of sons has petered out, and now it is necessary to move on to the
generation of grandsons. Bearing in mind that each of the 37 sons had
an average of 30 children, we are talking in the range of 900 or a
thousand grandchildren who are all in a position to make a challenge
for their inheritance.
Let?s
eliminate the 500 granddaughters who effectively do not count and we
are left with 500 grandsons all aspiring to the throne of Arabia.
Infighting works to each one?s advantage. Lately two died by
killing one another, which is not an unlucky event for those that
remain given that it reduces the number of potential candidates.
Arabia?s political situation does not appear extremely stable for
the future and as a result the U.S. intends to use a pawn: Iraq, the
second most important source of oil after Saudi Arabia. However they
do not have things all their own way, evidenced by the fact that, as
yet they haven?t found a replacement for Saddam (another reason for
the war to be postponed). Saddam?s opposition covers three levels:
in the north we find the Kurds. The Kurds are problematic due to
their links with Turkey. Turkey (one of the U.S.?s friendly nations
and a strategically important one at that) has been massacring Kurds
for quite a while now. In the northern strip there is no organised
opposition as this is the zone over which Saddam had most control and
it has since been wiped out. At the very most there are generals that
are as cold blooded as Saddam, jealous of his power, and covetous of
acceding to the presidency. And in the southern zone there is a
majority of Shiites, who would form an alliance with Iran, something
else the U.S. wants to avoid. All the above translates as the
absence of a replacement.
PREPARATIONS
FOR THE WAR
Let?s talk
about preparations for the war in general- a topic that relates to
many areas.
Firstly it
relates to money. Each year we spend a great deal of money making
provisions for war. In the last two or three years in particular,
global military spending reached $900 billion. As a benchmark let me
mention some information released by the FAO (Food and Agriculture
Organisation), which we have all heard but which we?d often prefer
not to be reminded of: every day one hundred thousand people die as a
result of hunger. The FAO says that these people do not die from lack
of food, that the world produces enough food but it is produced in
regions where it is not needed. In contrast those that need it don?t
get it. For this reason an emergency fund was set up to bring food to
the people who need it but can?t access it. In the midst of such a
frightening situation, rich countries fail to respond to the FAO?s
request for $50 billion to eradicate hunger, but it is fully capable
of spending eighteen times more than this figure in the arms race. I
want to state clearly that the Spanish State is an active participant
in the arms race. NATO has accused Spain of concealing arms spending
in other ministerial areas. The by now famous combat airplane that
crashed in November was constructed in part, in Spain, however at no
time was said spending recorded in the accounts of the Ministry of
Defence. At the outset it was entered in the accounts for the
Ministry of Industry and later when this Ministry was no longer
operating, it was recorded in the accounts of the Ministry for
Research. Each year we attempt to calculate the real cost of defence
spending, which involves taking the Ministry of Defence figure and
adding amounts hidden in other ministries. I can tell you that in
2003 Spanish defence expenditure accounted for 7600 million pesetas
per day, a figure I can verify to the last peseta. This is the first
point: we make provisions for the war through money.
Secondly: we
make provisions through people who perform manoeuvres and
simulations. There are twenty six million people registered in the
armed forces in the world, without taking into account
paramilitaries, guerrillas, police etc., I?m counting only military
personnel. The UN has estimated the number people required to avoid
war and ensure peace. In my opinion we don?t need any but the UN
has estimated that the number required is 400,000. Thus I would like
to see 25,600,000 people go home, thus leaving the required 400,000,
who in time, we will also be in a position to think about sending
home. Recently the Spanish State missed an amazing opportunity to
limit the number of soldiers by converting to a professional army.
How many soldiers have we? Our army is made up of 170,000
individuals, which is clearly out of proportion. If the UN estimates
that 400,000 are sufficient for the entire world, then how do we need
170,000? I recently heard some interesting statements from a man that
was presented as Head of Recruitment and Personnel for the Armed
Forces. He was asked why we needed 170,000 and he answered "firstly
it?s a question of status and secondly it?s about safeguarding
national sovereignty (which is complete idiocy if you consider that
all Aznar does each morning is call Bush to find out what his chores
for the day are. If he dares do something he has not been given
permission to, like he did the day he got on the boat in the Yemen,
he will be told to go home immediately like a good little boy), and
to take part in international peace-keeping activities. Spain has
been taking part in international peace efforts for over 10 years and
throughout this period, 20,000 soldiers have been involved (in actual
fact 10,000 were involved on two occasions). So exactly what purpose
do the other 150,000 troops serve? In Spain there are 50,000 army
officers, who have all trained to become military personnel and of
course we have to support them. But honestly, what kind of officer
only commands two soldiers? This is where we hit on the reason for
keeping 100,000 soldiers: to satisfy the 50,000 officers and to act
as peacekeeping troops (20,000). Now see where the figure of 170,000
military personnel comes from, as officially recorded by the
government. Troops are involved in other operations besides
peacekeeping missions: four years ago during the War in Kosova, the
albanian-kosovars escaped persecution from the Serb army and fled to
Albania as refugees. Albania is the poorest country in Europe. As a
result refugees required international aid, which was swiftly
supplied by the Spanish army. They performed one of the more
prestigious tasks in the operation in that they were responsible for
constructing a refugee camp in the second major town in Albania. I
remember seeing a picture on TV of old people being accompanied by
soldiers in the refugee camp. This camp housed 5000 people at a cost
of 7 billion pesetas.
Machine guns blinding you and
bombs exploding your eardrums are the not unlikely consequences of
military life for the 500,000 trainees who devote their lives to this
labour. In the Spanish state it works perfectly smoothly. With each
new course intake, university heads (at least those in Catalonia)
protest against the 45% public finance spending on scientific
investigation that goes to military investigation. This is a horrific
fact. The 45 % accounts for between 220,000 and 250,000 million
pesetas per annum. From 1986 until 2002, 90% of this money was spent
on a single research project- building the Eurofighter combat
aeroplane- a project on which Spain participated and which acts as an
example to all of us. The Eurofighter crashed a few months ago.
Four countries collaborated on
building the plane: Great Britain (37%), Germany (33%), Italy (17%)
and Spain (13%). As such we were the smallest partner and were given
responsibility for building the smallest part: the tail and left
wing. In fact the plane?s overall stability was called into
question- as evidenced in November- bearing in mind Italy was
assigned construction of the right wing. Despite this, Spain
continues to spend 220,000 million pesetas on military investigation.
The fourth element is arms manufacturing. How can we describe the
arms industry? It is an industry characterised by a concentration of
power: in the U.S. there are three arms companies that between them
account for 60% of the supply to the Pentagon. These companies have
absurd levels of political influence. At a congress I attended in
Paris, the North American speaker explained how he had devoted his
life to studying the lives of the thirty or so people in congress and
the senate who comprise the defence commission. Of these individuals,
all had a double salary without exception. They receive a salary from
the senate or congress, in addition to an income from one of the
three arms companies in return for supporting arms purchases and
approving proposals. So it is no wonder that when the U.S. government
decides to bomb a particular location its decision is always backed
by at least 30 senators and congressmen, who applaud and praise Bush
senior for his actions. The European context is also characterised by
a concentration of power (to a lesser extent).
The final topic is the arms
trade. This is a North - South business. The arms are manufactured
and generate profits for countries in the north, while they are paid
for and cause suffering to countries in the south. Hence the not
uncommon suspicion that lots of arms pay for lots of drugs and vice
versa (though the suspicion is difficult to prove). The second item
is non-transparency: this business is far from clear-cut. Both the
type of product and its final destination tends to be shrouded in
mystery. For example, a combat helicopter is constructed. It is then
delivered as a civil helicopter and a couple of months later a
delivery of missiles arrives. When the missiles are attached the
helicopter becomes a combat weapon. Theoretically the missile is the
only item that has been sold as an arm. Sometimes this process is
much cruder. I was in Madrid doing some research on Spanish
companies? activities when I came across a company that was
involved in systematic gun selling. Their sales were presented as
sales of DIY tools such as Black & Decker. There is also a lack
of transparency when it comes to arms destinations. Obviously the
recipients are countries that are at war. However, sellers don?t
especially like announcing they are providing support to countries at
war, therefore they dissimulate their activities. The most shameful
period was that between 1980 and 1988 when the war between Iran and
Iraq raged and which culminated in 2 million deaths. The UN issued an
embargo forbidding arms from being sent to Iran or Iraq during the
war. When the war ended in 1988 the UN looked at whether the embargo
had been respected- findings showed it hadn?t. It published 3 lists
of charges, which included the countries that had not complied, by:
- sending arms to Iraq
-
sending arms to Iran
- sending arms to both simultaneously.
The
third list was the longest and featured 37 countries, among which
were the U.S., the U.S.S.R., France, England, Italy, Germany, Spain
and Sweden, the latter proving somewhat of a surprise. The only thing
that set Sweden apart was that they investigated the matter by
looking into where sales had gone. Their findings showed that a
company that very few people were familiar with had sold arms.
However all would have recognised the principle shareholder in said
company. This shareholder was in fact a very famous Swedish company
called Dinamit Nobel (established by Alfred Nobel who, to try and
ease his guilt, created the Nobel peace prize. This meant that
Nobel?s descendants were acting in a very contradictory fashion as
regards peace efforts). There were no investigations in any of the
other countries and in the Spanish case a document written by the
government of Jordan came to light explaining that Spain was sending
arms there. It is common knowledge that Jordan had neither money nor
fighting and that it was purely acting as a smokescreen. The same
applied to Syria. These cases only go to show that Spain is an
extremely active participant in the global arms trade. The European
parliament published a resolution condemning Spain for its policy of
selling arms to the third world (despite the Spanish government
wanting it to dissimulate) and branding its policy as very
aggressive. Spain is not the first, second or third biggest arms
seller in the world (it?s more like the 8th or 9th)
and ahead of Spain in the list are countries like Germany, England,
and the U.S., who sell extremely technologically advanced arms. They
also sell arms to first world countries. Countries like Spain and
China appear further down the list. These are countries that
manufacture simple arms that will ultimately go to countries wars
there are wars, that is, the third world. Spain has sent arms to (a
recorded fact) 85 countries in the third world. I will end with two
specific cases:
A couple of years ago, the UN
passed a resolution which found the then president of Indonesia,
general Suharto, guilty of genocide for massacring 300,000 people in
East Timor. I had the chance to speak with the Spanish ambassador at
the UN and he explained how he had suffered by not being able to take
an active part in condemning Suharto. Instead he had to abstain from
the vote. Hours beforehand he had received a call from the Minister
for Foreign Affairs in Madrid, who was a PSOE party member at the
time, who ordered him to abstain. When he asked why, he was told that
"construcciones aeronáuticas"- the main armament
construction company in Spain- had a subsidiary in Jakarta and the
government did not want the ambassador to jeopardize their business.
Moving swiftly on to the PP, a year ago, the head of the Kurdistan
rebels was captured in Turkey by the Israeli MOSAD and was sentenced
to death. However he was not executed. A funny coincidence is that
the day the legal case that would sentence him to death began,
Rodrigo Rato and Phillip de Bourbon landed in Turkey accompanied by
25 Spanish arms industrialists to sell the Turkish government all the
arms it wanted to continue massacring the Kurdish population. This is
how Spain is taking part in the war.
Translated by Sharon Couglhlan