Sunday, January 4, 2009
"I am saddened," former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan wrote in his memoir, "that it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge what everyone knows: the Iraq war is largely about oil."
Greenspan was certainly right that in the Bush administration, oil has been a love that dared not speak its name. One searches long and hard in the president's many Iraq speeches to find a single occurrence of the vulgar word "oil." With a Victorian delicacy, the administration has preferred, when it could not avoid the gross topic altogether, to employ polite circumlocutions such as "mineral resources" or lofty obfuscations such as "patrimony."
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