(AFP) |
In November 2018, Axios reported that President Trump twice asked Iraq’s Prime Minister Haidar Abadi for Iraq’s oil. This was an embarrassment to the president’s staff, but the question of why Trump would make such a ridiculous request not once, but twice was never answered. It stems from his world view, which is shaped by money and leads him to believes that the U.S. should use its military to make a profit.
President Trump twice
asked PM Abadi for Iraq’s petroleum to repay for the U.S. invasion.
The first time was in March 2017 when Abadi visited the White House. Trump said
that the U.S. had spent trillions on the Iraq war and a lot of people had
talked about taking Iraq’s oil, so he asked Abadi when America would get it.
Abadi was polite and said that his country had plenty of contracts with U.S.
oil companies. In the summer of 2017, Trump made a phone call to Baghdad when
he again brought up the issue of getting Iraq’s oil. Afterward, National
Security Adviser H.R. McMaster told the president that he was wrong for
bringing up the issue. Trump asked what was the U.S. getting out of Iraq and it
made America look like idiots spending all this time and money there. He asked
McMaster why the U.S. hadn’t taken the oil as payment. Defense Secretary Jim
Mattis chimed in that couldn’t happen because it was a violation of
international law, would make the U.S. look bad in the region, and provide
propaganda to its enemies. Trump finally seemed to drop the topic.
Trump had voiced a similar view on the campaign trail. He
complained that the U.S. had spent all this money on the Iraq war and gained
nothing. He repeatedly said that the U.S. should have taken Iraq’s oil in
return.
In Bob Woodward’s Fear,
Trump in the White House, he explains that the president has
these opinions due to his business background. He sees everything in terms of
money as a result. He’s told his staff that the goal of the military should be
making a profit. He even derided his generals and staff such as former National
Security Adviser McMaster because they didn’t think like businessmen. As a
result, he wanted the U.S. to seize Afghanistan’s minerals or at least get an
American company to exploit them, and he refused to sign an order on Libya
policy once saying that U.S. should take its oil. This is where he got the idea
to talk about Iraqi petroleum on the campaign trail and brought it up with PM
Abadi twice. This is a stereotype of critics of Washington that it went into Iraq
for its oil, and was used to deride the invasion. This is actually how Trump
thinks. It represents his crass world view where he neither knows how the
military, the government or law works, and doesn’t care. Profits is how he’s
seen the world for the last several decades and being president has not changed
that.
SOURES
Swan, Jonathan, “1 big thing: Scoop – Trump to Iraqi PM: How about that
oil?” Axios, 11/25/18
Woodward, Bob, Fear,
Trump in the White House, New York, London, Toronto, Sydney, New Delhi:
Simon & Schuster, 2018
2 comments:
Joel,
Trump became President in January 2017, so the dated March 2016 should be corrected to march 2017.
Thanks for catching that Typo!
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