In an article entitled "Catastrophe Capitalism", author and globalisation critic Naomi Klein reflects in La Vanguardia on current developments in the global economy, touching among other issues on the Iraq War: "Some of the architects of the Iraq War do not even deny that the prime motivation for the invasion was oil. Fadhil Chalabi, one of the key advisors to the Bush government in the months before the war, recently said that the invasion was 'a strategic action taken by the USA and the UK in the Persian Gulf to secure oil supplies'. Occupying another state to use its natural resources violates the Geneva Convention. That means that rebuilding the infrastructure in Iraq - including the oil infrastructure - is the task of the invaders. They must pay reparations. (Let us not forget that Saddam Hussein's regime had to pay Kuwait 9 billion dollars in reparations after the 1990 invasion.) Instead, Iraq is being forced to sell 75 percent of its natural resources to pay for an illegal invasion and occupation." (11/08/2008)
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