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Week of June 10- June 16, 2007
'Summer
Re-Runs II'
This
week we've posted another of our Sunday-format strips from
2005. The topic, once again, is foreign oil and our seeming
inability to wean ourselves away from it.
Back in 2004--before the polls were so overwhelmingly negative
toward the President and the war in Iraq--Americans were
fairly well unified on a surprising issue: the importance
of reducing dependence on foreign oil. Back then, even the
conservative Hudson Institute reported that a significant
majority of Americans were willing to forego low oil prices
for reduced dependence on foreign oil.
The reason? A growing sense that the billions and billions
we keep sending to the Middle East are being used to fund
terrorism. I know, it sounds a little nutty. But, after
you read an excerpt from a U.S. News and World Report article
from 2003, you may change your position:
"The CIA's Illicit Transactions Group isn't listed
in any phone book. There are no entries for it on any news
database or Internet site. The ITG is one of those tidy
little Washington secrets, a group of unsung heroes whose
job is to keep track of smugglers, terrorists, and money
launderers. In late 1998, officials from the White House's
National Security Council called on the ITG to help them
answer a couple of questions: How much money did Osama bin
Laden have, and how did he move it around?"
"The queries had a certain urgency. A cadre of bin
Laden's al Qaeda terrorists had just destroyed two of America's
embassies in East Africa. The NSC was determined to find
a way to break the organization's back. Working with the
Illicit Transactions Group, the NSC formed a task force
to look at al Qaeda's finances. For months, members scoured
every piece of data the U.S. intelligence community had
on al Qaeda's cash."
" The team soon realized that its most basic assumptions
about the source of bin Laden's money--his personal fortune
and businesses in Sudan--were wrong. Dead wrong. Al Qaeda,
says William Wechsler, the task force director, was "a
constant fundraising machine." And where did it raise
most of those funds? The evidence was indisputable: Saudi
Arabia. America's longtime ally and the world's largest
oil producer had somehow become, as a senior Treasury Department
official put it, "the epicenter" of terrorist
financing."
"This didn't come entirely as a surprise to intelligence
specialists. But until the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, U.S.
officials did painfully little to confront the Saudis not
only on financing terror but on backing fundamentalists
and jihadists overseas. Over the past 25 years, the desert
kingdom has been the single greatest force in spreading
Islamic fundamentalism, while its huge, unregulated charities
funneled hundreds of millions of dollars to jihad groups
and al Qaeda cells around the world."
Since that article was printed four years ago, there's been
a growing realization that our addiction to oil and the
excesses it affords us is coming at a far greater price
than a little disposable income. It may be the most expensive,
destructive addiction the world has ever known.
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