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Good News From Baghdad At Last: The Oil Law Has Stalled
The panic and distraction of the security crisis should not be used as cover for handing Iraq's wealth to foreigners
Glad tidings from Baghdad at last. The Iraqi parliament has gone into summer recess without passing the oil law that Washington was pressing it to adopt. For the Bush administration this is irritating, since passage of the law was billed as a "benchmark" in its battle to get Congress not to set a timetable for US troop withdrawals. The political hoops through which the government of Nouri al-Maliki has been asked to jump were meant to be a companion piece to the US "surge". Just as General David Petraeus, the current US commander, is due to give his report on military progress next month, George Bush is supposed to tell Congress in mid-September how the Maliki government is moving forward on reform.
The signs are that, on both fronts, the administration will carry on playing for time. Bush and his officials are already suggesting they will maintain the surge for another year, and that Petraeus's report will merely be an interim score card. It will not use the fateful Vietnam-era language of light at the end of the tunnel, but it will say progress is under way and therefore more congressional patience is needed.Similarly Ryan Crocker, the US ambassador in Baghdad, is playing down the urgency of the benchmarks. He has reminded the US media that Congress can take years to make reforms on complex issues such as immigration and healthcare. He argues it is unfair to expect the Iraqi parliament to do everything as fast as outsiders might wish.
That said, the administration - particularly the vice-president, Dick Cheney - and the oil lobby are enraged that the oil law is stalled. The main reason is not that the Iraqi government and parliament are a lazy bunch of Islamist incompetents or narrow-minded sectarians, as is often implied. MPs are studying the law more carefully, and have begun to see it as a major threat to Iraq's national interest regardless of people's religion or sect.
This is the second bit of good news from Iraq. Civil society, trade unions, professional oil experts and the media are stirring on the oil issue and putting their points across to parliament in the way democracy is meant to work. The oil unions have held strikes even at the risk of having leaders and members arrested.
The pervasive outside image of Iraq as a country in free-fall where violence on a mass scale is an ever-present threat is not wrong. But it can mask the fact that "normal life" and indeed "normal politics" are still possible. The real reason why the Bush administration wanted the oil law rushed through was that it feared public discussion, and was worried that the more people understood what the law entails, the greater the chances of its defeat. Key parties in the Iraqi parliament oppose it, including the main Sunni party - which this week withdrew from government - as well as the Shia Sadrists and Fadhila.
Washington has promoted the law as a "reconciliation" issue, claiming its early passage would show that Iraq's ethnic and sectarian communities could share revenues on a fair basis. But this is a trick. Only one of the law's 43 articles mentions revenue-sharing, and then just to say that a separate "federal revenue law" will decide its distribution. The first draft of this other law only appeared in June, and it is clearly unreasonable to expect the Iraqi parliament to pass it in less than two months.
The law that Washington and the US oil lobby really want would set the arrangements for foreign companies to operate in Iraq's oil sector. Independent analysts say the terms being proposed are far more favourable for foreign oil companies than those of any other oil-producing state in the region, including Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. They all impose some safeguards for the national interest, whether it is having a national company that controls production; specifying in contracts the maximum level of foreigners' profits; limiting foreigners to a small number of fields; or insisting that disputes are arbitrated in local rather than international tribunals. Other big oil countries, including Russia and Venezuela, insist on parliamentary approval for contracts covering "strategic" fields or for joint ventures.
Platform, an oil industry watchdog, warns that the Iraq oil and gas law could "sign away Iraq's future". Greg Muttitt, its co-director, says: "The law is permissive. All of Iraq's unexploited and as yet unknown reserves, which could amount to between 100bn and 200bn barrels, would go to foreign companies."
Public pressure has already brought some changes. The first drafts of 2006 talked of production-sharing agreements, a system of concessions like those Russia gave to foreign oil companies in the days of proto-capitalist weakness in the early 1990s, and which Moscow no longer uses. The latest Iraqi drafts now talk of "exploration risk contracts". They could last for 30 years without a chance of revision, and be equally bad.
One of the most significant aspects of Iraqi society's awakening on the issue is a recent letter to parliament from 106 Iraqi oil industry technocrats, including exiles who fled the Saddam regime. They argue that there is no need to rush the law, since at a time of insecurity no foreign investment is likely. They want parliament to have the right of scrutiny of proposed contracts with the national oil company. They propose passing the revenue-sharing law before the oil law, and not vice versa - an eminently sensible view that Bush should adopt.
Whether the issue came up in Camp David this week is unclear, but the British government's role - like that of most western governments - has not been good. Working closely with the Americans, British officials in Baghdad saw drafts of the law before the Iraqi parliament. Britain supports the IMF line that Iraq's final tranche of Saddam-era debts cannot be forgiven until Iraq has a law permitting foreigners a role in the oil industry.
As a staunch supporter of the current international financial architecture, Gordon Brown is unlikely to press for a relaxation of these unfair terms. More's the pity, since the best way for Iraq to prosper once the occupation is over and it finally solves its sectarian crisis is to have maximum control over its major natural resource. Most Iraqis believe the invasion of 2003 was largely about oil. Peace is also about oil, and it surely makes sense not to let the panic and distraction of the current security crisis be used as a cover for handing the country's wealth to foreigners.
© 2007 The Guardian



35 Comments so far
Show AllEither that or the oil is being re-routed:
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=332835
"The real reason why the Bush administration wanted the oil law rushed through was that it feared public discussion, and was worried that the more people understood what the law entails, the greater the chances of its defeat."
Standard Rove Operating Procedure. We see it again happening with the "Must Spy on Americans More" law the Loonitary Liar is demanding be passed RIGHT NOW BEFORE WE ALL DIE. Remember how fast the Patriot Act had to be passed? Or the Military Commissions Act - must pass before election! And now, MUST PASS SPYING BILL before we all die!
As an American Indian, I have always viewed the oil law is the traditional white man method of taking all the resources of the land from the aboriginal people.
I am happy we are starting to see dialogue on this.
The oil law is a form of extortion. To make that a benchmark to say that there is progress being made is ludicrous.
Get them by the nuts and their hearts and minds will fallow.
Iraqi oil for Iraqi's. If they want any advice on how to use it they should contact Hugo Chavez. The rich already have enough. Those poor Iraqi people could use a bit of good will.
Entry Word: exploit
Function: verb
Text: 1 to take unfair advantage of
Synonyms abuse, capitalize (on), cash in (on), impose (on or upon), play (on or upon), use
Related Words manipulate, mistreat; bleed, cheat, fleece, overcharge, skin, soak, stick; commercialize
2 to control or take advantage of by artful, unfair, or insidious means -- see MANIPULATE 1
Let's see if there is something on which Kurds, Shiites, and Sunnis can agree. We control our oil! An excellent beginning! How about all American and coalition troops out of or country ASAP. How about semi-autonomous confederation status for the three main elements that make up the country? The possibilities are endless.
Iraqis of all stripes should adopt the Stones "Time is on my side" as their working national anthem. L Paul Bremmer--Go to Hell!
Then war in Iraq has cost the American tax payer 1 trillion dolar.
With that price tag, the govrnment cound have developed renuable alternatives to oil. or buy 50000000 Prius.
We can now expect the untimelty demise of Mr. Maliki, and the "appointment" of more Bush friendly Iraq officials. Until the robber barrons have control of that oil, Iraq's democracy will operate just like ours. Bribes, extortion, ambigous laws designed to lead to the same conclusion of elite control of resources coupled with just enough income and infrastructure for the masses to survive and work for the man.
Bonnie is right on ! The genocide waged against Native Americans were the first crimes against humanity devised by an endless procession of sociopathic Christians made in America. Manifest Destiny meant kill the natives and steal their land. "Iraqi Freedom" means kill the Iraqis and steal their oil. Indians were demonized as "savages" while Iraqis defending their country are "terrorists". George "W" is only the most recent imbecile chanting God bless America while slaughtering the innocent. The good news is that the current empire of greed may be over-extended and ready for a fall.
"Be nice to America or we will bring democray to your country" a bumper sticker read. I agree with Marc above and anticipate that the U.S. will go back to its normal and oft used fallback position of installing another ruthless dictator thug who will show deference to the Bush/Cheney cabal. Once he decides to stand on his own two feet, he will be dispatched like Noriega and all the ones before him. That is the merry - go- round circus of American foreign policy.
I thought from the beginning that the Iraq war was about the oil, but I was only partly right.
It is becoming obvious that the war was part of a plan to keep a perpetual war going, keep all Americans living in fear, and gradually chip away at the constitution.
The slimy war criminals have gone a long way to achieving this goal, with the Patriot act, Military Commissions Act, etc.
And then there are the myriad of Executive Orders and Presidential Directives. I think we are being set up for martial law and cancellation of the 2008 election.
Oh, Dang!, Shucks!, & Fooey!, What are those silly people doing? They aren't supposed to act like they are going seriously democratic.
You dizzy bastards should have just offered to buy the oil from them. But, like all your sick kind you prefer to steal and subvert and murder to get what you want.
The hell you have visited on others is coming your way; just not soon enough to have saved the hundreds of thousands of lives you have pissed away for your own pitiful material gain.
Another area where Iraq's are not as stupid, compliant, or corrupt as Shotgun Dick, Bu$h the inferior, Rumskull, Wolfadipstick and the rest thought.
They will steal the oil money from each other, but they don't want to give it away.
The extortion angle of this hasn't been exposed enough. It was clear to me when Bush began pressing this "benchmark" of when we would leave Iraq that it was purely extortion. Remember that most of us had just voted for some kind of change (suckered again) and even our Iraqi puppets were saying it is time to go.
But no, says little Georgie, if you want us to leave, you have to sign these oil deals, otherwise we must conclude you're too unstable for us to leave. Might sell your oil to China, or some outrage to our HEROES like that.
"As an American Indian, I have always viewed the oil law is the traditional white man method of taking all the resources of the land from the aboriginal people."
On a much smaller scale, forcibly taking Hawaii from the Hawaiians and destroying their monarchy, just so the American sugar cane companies can have their land without interference from the native population. Seems so quaint now, but it's always the same principle. Take away the resources of aboriginal people, as you said. Cook up reasons and excuses for doing it if you can.
Just remember, this is not a war for oil. Repeat.
http://www.wordsareimportant.com/lifeisbeautiful.htm - Life Is Beautiful, a view of Iraq
it has, always was, and continues to be all about oil. it is that simple. PNAC!
Isn't there a lot of oil in Mexico? Does Cheney know it?
I wholeheartedly agree it is mostly about oil.
But it is also about Israel.
Israel wanted Iraq removed as a competitor. So it was.
Also Israel has been trying for years to get it's hands on some of the fresh water of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers.
I don't have the info at my fingertips but you can find it.
I have read of plans, currently on hold for obvious reasons, to pipe water from Iraq to Israel.
Iraq possesses about 20% of the the fresh water in the entire Middle East.
Finally......Saddam was moving swiftly towards selling ALL of its oil in something OTHER than US dollars. The EURO was the intended currency.
Most folks aren't aware of the financial windfall the US receives from the fact that ALL oil transactions worldwide currently MUST be in US dollars.
Saddams' plan would have been a crushing blow to the US economy and US control of the oil trade worldwide.
That change was set to take effect in March 2003. The very month that the US began bombing Iraq.
Just a few things for folks to research and think about.
I would very much like to read any comments on this.
all the best
#
KEM PATRICK August 4th, 2007 7:31 am
Isn't there a lot of oil in Mexico? Does Cheney know it?
I doubt most people know that the largest portion of our oil and natural gas imports come from Canada. And I'm pretty sure that next in line is Mexico.
The fact is the numbers I have read are that we only import somewhere between 12-15% of our oil and gas from the Middle East. An amount that we could easily make up elsewhere.
The oil companies simply prefer to obtain ME oil for two reasons.
(1) The logical desire to keep local supplies for later.
(2) But probably as or more important is the profit margin in ME oil, especially Iraqi oil.
Iraqi oil is easily recoverable and so "clean" that it costs literally pennies per barrel to refine.
I have read that Iraqi oil sits in vast pools only a few thousand feet below the surface.
The oil is "low sulphur" crude which is cheap to refine and results in very little wastage in the form of basically useless "gunk".
But I suspect that scientists are hard at work trying to figure out a way to use that "gunk" as a weapon so as to make a buck off of it that way.
all the best
Jeff Moehring August 4th, 2007 7:49 am
Jeff:
In "The Secret History of the American Empire" (published in 2007), author John Perkins, a former "Economic Hit Man",
talked about his role in helping to engineer a deal (early 70s) with the Saudis to get OPEC to sell their oil in U.S. currency. As he pointed out: "As long as oil reigned as the 'supreme' resource, the dollar's domination as the standard world currency was assured...".
This book not only exposes the truth about global corruption but offers advice as to how "the people" can be instrumental in creating change. It is definitely worth reading.
Jeff Moehring August 4th, 2007 7:49 am
Thank you for this very interesting information. I will plan on reading the book by Perkins as suggested by Gail and will research your leads also.
I also think that Iraqi oil is only one reason for our occupation of Iraq. It seems to me that the goal is to position our military in a strategic position to keep our thumb on the Middle East. We don't have to satisfy ourselves with just Iraqi oil, we can control them all.
Gail makes an important point about the dollar. We are so impressed with our military might (Do you recall the "Gee whiz!es which narrated the first Gulf War?). It looks like a lot of players like China, Iran, Venezuela are considering trading in euros. Such a scenario might just cause a collapse of our economic house of cards.
It _is_ about the oil.
But it is not about access to the oil resources - that what the oil market is for. And, it is not just about control of the middle east. Imperialism seeks control of certain geographic regions for certain global strategic purposes. The desire to crush militant fundamentalist Islam, and the massive support of the symbiotic-colonial State of Israel are just tactics, not strategic goals.
For the ME It's about control of the word's single greatest concentration of that increasingly scarce resource. Control just a significant percentage of the oil (20% is more than enough); control the world.
And, there is nothing new about this - it started way before Bush. All Bush did was follow-through with the inevitable "taking the gloves off". In 1945, a State Department report described ME oil as "a stupendous source of strategic power", and "one of the greatest material prizes in world history".
Gail August,
Thanks. I had already read "Confessions.." and plan to read the book you mentioned.
I was aware of the history of the dollar base for oil trade, but look foward to reading Perkins' stuff as well.
Again thanks for the tip
all the best
It IS about the oil, but PJD hits it:
"For the ME It's about control of the word's single greatest concentration of that increasingly scarce resource. Control just a significant percentage of the oil (20% is more than enough); control the world."
That's why we are inducing chaos rather than quelling it, arming all sides, switching our alliances among Sunni and Shi'ites. That's why Iran is in grave danger of becoming a glass parkinglot, Bush/Cheney don't need the oil, they need to prevent "enemies" from getting oil. If they can starve China, they can prevent it from challenging US (ref.PNAC)
We could stop importing Middle Eastern Oil by simply bringing CAFE standards up to the levels proposed for 2020, now (and that is technically feasable without sweat).
Jeff Moehring:
Saddam switched to euros on November 22, 2000, while bushsluts were busy stealing USA elections. On that very day, Saddam signed his own death warrant.
This explains why cheneybushsluts were intent on invasion of Iraq from DAY ONE of their regime...to eliminate this euro threat to petro-dollar hegemony and to make a bloody EXAMPLE out of Iraq, as in "look what we will inflict upon any other ME oil producers who DARE switch to euros, thereby challenging our dollar monopoly."
This was a war against the euro, manufactured into a "war on terror." The terror has been created and orchestrated by cheneybushsluts. America, the nation is doomed.
canardtahiti,
Perhaps I mis-remembered some things.
I was thinking that Hussein's plan to begin trading oil in Euros was still not in effect prior to our invasion.
Or are you speaking of something else?
I could swear that I read that the actual trading of oil from Iraq in Euros was still not actively being done?
However that was a few years ago that I read this and I can certainly have things confused.
It really makes no difference in terms of the discussion, but I try to be certain of my facts before posting.
Also as of March of this year Iran was supposed to open the Iranian oil bourse for trading in THEIR oil in Euros.
This is what I read in European or Asian papers anyway.
I regret that I don't always bookmark these tidbits but I'm sure that the info can be found on the internet.
If so that certainly would help explain Cheney/Bush's frenzy to ramp up the push for war with Iran.
I am gonna try to find the article I read about the Iraqi oil thing and if I obtain clarification I shall post it here.
all the best
OK!
I must thank canardtahiti for setting the record straight.
I 2000 Iraq began selling it's oil in Euros. NOT in March 2003 as I had previously stated.
I think where my feeble old memory failed me is this:
In March 2006 IRAN began selling IT'S oil in euros.
Perhaps I got the two stories jumbled up in my mind.
It isn't ego or a sense of infallibility that made me want to make sure whether I was correct or not.
Lord knows it ain't the first mistake I've ever made:)).
But I DO TRY to be certain of the facts before I mount my soapbox:).
Although my mistake doesn't change the substance of the point we have all been making it IS important to get the facts straight.
A gaffe such as that is often all that is needed for folks who don't want to confront unpleasant truths to close their minds to what you (I) are saying.
So thanks again friend for the correct info.
all the best
Another excellent book on the subject of American Fascism in practice is "Overthrow" by Stephen Kinzer". Should be required reading for every high school history class.
Oh,oh! I see a lot of assets being frozen. After all, this is part of Bush's plan for peace, democracy and plenty in Iraq. From observation, I think his plan translates out to "kill the people and steal the oil."
Anybody who disagrees with this may have their assets frozen with no warning. His latest Executive Order says that anybody who interferes with his plan for the peace, freedom and democracy of Iraq will have their assets frozen.
Vicar August 5th, 2007 9:52 am SAYS:
We have been highjacked by fascists ruled by corporate zionists.
That says it ALL in my opinion....
RE: INVASION AND 'TERROR THREAT': NOT ONLY ABOUT OIL...
leighton August 3rd, 2007 10:01 pm
"I thought from the beginning that the Iraq war was about the oil, but I was only partly right.
"It is becoming obvious that the war was part of a plan to keep a perpetual war going, keep all Americans living in fear, and gradually chip away at the constitution."
Agreed. This is a point that has been raised with increasing frequency among progressives. The right has used 911 and the invasion not only to enrich Cheney's contractors or control oil, but to shut up political opposition and speed the right's U.S. domestic putsch.
Welcome to Bushworld, the new Cold War and the new McCarthyism. Welcome to Orwell's 1984, where eternal 'threat from without' was the grounds of domestic repression in Oceania.
Thomas Hartmann is one who has focused on this (there are others):
http://www.commondreams.org/views04/1207-26.htm
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/05/29/1500/