America's Oil Lust Means Long Middle East Involvement
Should the United States invade a foreign country for its oil?
If that question were posed in a poll, the vast majority of Americans would no doubt answer with a resounding "no." We're the good guys in the world, spreading democracy, freeing the oppressed, opposing tyrants. We wouldn't invade a sovereign country strictly out of a selfish lust for its resources, would we?
Of course we would. We've already supported coups, sent armies and invaded at least one country to protect our access to petroleum. In his newly published memoirs, Alan Greenspan, former chairman of the Federal Reserve, put that uncomfortable truth front and center with his thoughts on the invasion of Iraq.
"I'm saddened that it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge what everyone knows - the Iraq war is largely about oil," he wrote.
Indeed, he believed it was a good idea. He told The Washington Post that, in conversations with the White House, he supported the invasion.
"My view is that Saddam, looking over his 30-year history, very clearly was giving evidence of moving toward controlling the Straits of Hormuz, where there are 17, 18, 19 million barrels a day" moving through, Greenspan said.
The White House sent out legions of officials to object to Greenspan's comments, but he isn't the only person making that argument. Scores of liberal activists have made it. So have more than a few prominent conservatives. In "American Theocracy," former GOP political strategist Kevin Phillips wrote bluntly, "Oil abundance has always been part of what America fights for, as well as with."
Think about it. What other reason does the United States have for its deep involvement in the Middle East, an unstable region full of despots, hostile to democracy and friendly to jihadists? That's why the United States pushed Saddam out of Kuwait in 1991 - to prevent a subsequent invasion of oil-rich Saudi Arabia.
While several agendas converged to drive the war wagon to Baghdad in 2003, the critical factor - indeed the cause that underpinned all others - was protecting U.S. access to Middle East oil reserves.
Iraq and terrorism have dominated the presidential campaign so far, but none of the major candidates - Democrats or Republicans - has emphasized a plan to reduce our dependence on foreign oil. Without such a policy, this country won't be free of the Middle East anytime soon. If we remain addicted to oil, we will have to continue to coddle autocrats (the House of Saud, for example) and send troops to the Middle East. That, in turn, will further inflame a region already hostile to our interests.
President Bush had an unprecedented opportunity to help us end our petroleum dependence in the weeks and months following the terrorist attacks of 9/11, when Americans were prepared to make sacrifices for their security and for their country. With the political capital he had at the time, he could have imposed a steep tax on gasoline. The costs would have increased inflationary pressures, and Americans would have grumbled. But we would have adjusted. And we would have bought less gas.
That moment has been lost. Instead of demanding sacrifices from all of us, the president made fighting terrorism seem easy, imploring Americans to support their country by going shopping. His dismissiveness merely cemented a view that most of us wanted to believe already: Fighting terrorists wouldn't require anything from most of us.
Don't be fooled. The petroleum wars are just beginning. As China and India grow wealthier, more of their citizens indulge in the Western-style consumption patterns that burn vast amounts of fossil fuels. And their consumption is growing at the same time that some experts are predicting that petroleum reserves are close to their peak and will begin to decline soon.
Already, China is trying to lock down oil reserves in various parts of the world outside the Middle East. But don't worry. We can go shopping. Just remember that the checkout line is in Shanghai.
What will happen when the United States and China begin to compete for access to the same reserves? Unlike Iraq, China is an emerging superpower with the world's largest army. Any petroleum war with China might well bring an end to American hegemony on the world stage.
Cynthia Tucker is editorial page editor of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. E-mail her at cynthia@ajc.com
© 2007 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
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15 Comments so far
Show AllI find it remarkable that people complain about $3 gas, yet say very little about the $4 per gallon we pay in taxes to keep our bloated military feeding at the public trough.
That's right, a gallon of gas now really costs over $7 and continues to climb.
Of course this doesn't even include factors like ecological damage, lost productivity by those who get killed fighting around & over oil, the opportunity costs associated with neglect of our decaying infrastructure, food taken literally from the mouths of babes by diverting funds from vital social programs to feed the insatiable MI complex, or care of brain damaged vets that will require constant care by others for the rest of their miserable lives.
Are people really so stupid they can't see that by continuing to use hydrocarbon energy sources we will rapidly run our economy into ruin, face a state of perpetual warfare, displace hundreds of millions of people through climate change & degradation, and enable a very few fat cats (oil, coal, and gas moguls)to turn us into their vassals? Where is the sense or sanity in this current path we are on?
Solution? Do your research and you will find the only way for civilization to be progressive rather than regressive is to forcefully, rapidly, and determinedly go 'green'. By this I mean wind, solar, tidal, geothermal, hydro, biomass, & other power sources must be funded for research, development, and construction en masse. At the moment conservation is a huge effort to be undertaken, and will provide the greatest short term gains, but in the long run, as we become more efficient in our power consumption, its benefits will decline.
Notice I didn't mention ethanol production from food crops, because this is a counterproductive energy source, which actually is detrimental to a huge portion of the world's population, damages the land, and uses more energy to produce than it produces. Perhaps one day this infant technology will become more efficient, and be of net value, but it is far from there now, and undeserving of the massive investment that farmers might approve of, but does us little good when compared to what we could gain from investing in other energy sources.
Nor did I mention the option of nuclear power generation, which is too costly, too dangerous, and presents too many waste disposal problems that are untenable. Besides that the fuel is a finite commodity that will run out just like oil, so why spend precious resources on what is (in the long run) only a temporary solution to our energy needs?
The clock is ticking and there is no way to turn back the hands. Do we want to be decent human beings, or do we want to be perpetual warmongers trying to steal the resources of other nations? Do we want to 'show' the rest of the world a better way to live, or are we satisfied to be a gang of criminal thugs raping, killing, and pillaging around the world over diminishing oil resources? There are powerful unscrupulous forces & men that will try to thwart progress for their greedy licentious benefit, but they must be pushed out of the way for the common good. As I said, though, the clock is ticking.
jackandcoke,
But the question remains: Why honestly are we still in Iraq? If it is about taking control of someone else's oil (which many said from the beginning and now everyone seems to be agreeing upon), then i rest my case regarding the "horrific american myth". The US of A is in Iraq causing continued suffering of innocence in order to try to control a resource within the land of others. Not unlike what the US of A has done repeatedly over the course of history.
I refuse to be part of this myth anymore. I have no qualms with the Iraqi People and if there are individuals in Houston, or Dallas, or Wichita, or whatever.....who are trying to create "illusions" or "wag some dog tails", then all i can say is they are living in a dream world that many are starting to rebut, rebuke, rebuff & refute. All that is left is reduce and reform (one or both as necessary).
I won't get into it with some of what you are saying about oil shortages and such -- it almost doesn't matter. Even if we had all the oil we could imagine (unlimited supply), if we keep burning it like there is no tommorrow there will be no tommorrow for humanity.
Just like it was alluded to on another thread "the earth does not rotate around humanity....."
Each day this war continues the consequences for all People become more severe....at least it seems this way to me.....
Peace,
Ken Hausle
Every politically-aware American needs to read Greg Palast's "Armed Madhouse" to understand just how twisted and deep the Big Oil Lie has grown.
Our presence in Iraq is not about grabbing their oil; it's about SUPRESSING their oil production and therefore keeping the price HIGH. We can only do that by controlling their oil.
Ownership of Iraqi oil is irrelevant because there is no oil shortage. As Palast details, the whole "Peak Oil" story is just that--a piece of fiction concocted 50 years ago by Shell Oil down in Houston to create the illusion of scarcity and push the price of gas up above the 25-cent per gallon level.
Twenty-five cents a gallon? Yup. Ask your nearest 60-year old.
Sadaam had to go because he was screwing with oil prices. And that's what this "war" is all about.
I don't think this article is stupid. It is discussing something that more folks need to be thinking about. Specifically: Why honestly are we still in Iraq? "Its the oil stupid" is now the most likely answer and yes this is getting pretty obvious isn't it?
So as citizens of the US of A, i think we need to ask some hard questions.
1. What is so important about this oil?
2. Is this oil the only option? (I'll answer this: NO NO NO it is not)
3. What are other options? (there are many many better options....)
4. Etc., Etc, etc, etc......
Perhaps more importantly we need to ask ourselves this very basic question? To whom does the oil belong? I'd have to argue it belongs to the People who live in Iraq, and it is solely up to them to choose how to use it. It is not up to the USofA government or any incorporated entity.
Lastly, i think most importantly we need to ask this: Is it OK for innocent Iraqi's to be dyeing every day and displaced from their home and the daily sustanance they need to survive? Is this OK knowing what we know now? I don't think this is OK at all. This is a travesty, but at least it has managed to expose the "american myth" in all its "horrific glory".....
Its time to end this war for heaven's sake.....
Peace,
Ken Hausle
Boy, I wonder if she figured this out all by herself? People have been screaming about this for years and she comes out with this after Greenspan comes clean. Better late than never, I guess.
President Bush had an unprecedented opportunity to help us end our petroleum dependence in the weeks and months following the terrorist attacks of 9/11, when Americans were prepared to make sacrifices for their security and for their country. With the political capital he had at the time, he could have imposed a steep tax on gasoline. The costs would have increased inflationary pressures, and Americans would have grumbled. But we would have adjusted. And we would have bought less gas.
She is stoned here. Bush works for big Oil. He doesn't want to tax it, and he can't end our petroleum dependance even if he does tax it.
Petroleum wars with China? I should hope not. Real war would be WW3 and proxy wars in Africa would be so redundant.
When oil production peaks, it will become more expensive and we will search seriously for alternative fuels. It will be a horrible problem, but we will probably move to natural gas as a fuel if there is nothing else. We have the pipelines in place.
This article seems stupid to me.
POET____I noticed in your list of things to do away with was mechanized McAgriculture, which seems to be quite a popular topic for Progressives to rail about. Anyone believing that theory better take a trip to some country that still uses back breaking labor to raise a small amount of products as we did in our country only around 70 years ago. In the first place, how many city folks will want to come back out to the farms and help produce all of that great organic food for others . It is getting harder all the time to keep the farm-raised young people doing the job even with newer methods of farming.
If we consider that theory, let`s also throw out all the computers, microwaves, SUV`s, riding mowers, satellite TV, and all of us just live like the pioneers in sod houses. It is no wonder the Progressives have trouble getting traction in the so-called Red states with these backward attitudes. Food in this country is safe except for a few isolated incidents and is cheap in comparison with most other countries. It may be fun to support the gay lifestyle (for instance) and then continually peck away at the nations agriculture but it is most certainly not smart.
I'm lucky to live a near a bus line that takes me where I need to go and use my car only once or twice a week, so I have a partly clean conscience.
If necessary, the United States should invade other countries for oil (necessary means necessary - when all other options for getting the needful have failed). All societies raid in time of famine. Happy?
I love you Cynthia Tucker. I hate how we need to use dissenting right wingers to make a point though.
For 70 years, America has been dependent on petroleum ever since Industrial Hemp, despite the fact that it has low THC and has 25000 industrial uses, has been banned. IT'S NO COINCIDENCE THAT AMERICA FIGHTS RESOURCE WARS FOR OIL WHILE AT THE SAME TIME OUTLAWING THE VERY PLANT(S) THAT COULD SAVE OUR LIVES.
Bravo Cynthia Tucker--
You have placed the fault for the current mideast debacles of the United States exactly where it belongs--on the
"American People" as Nancy and Harry like to intone.
All of us who must have our fast foods, plastics, mechanized McAgriculture, and the "happy motoring" of our commuter culture of shopping malls and suburban sprawl are responsible for the necessity of this mess in Iraq (soon to be appearing in Iran and maybe even Syria).
For those of us who damn the sneering Cheney, let's prove our contempt by:
buying less gasoline, propane, and other petroleum products.
driving fewer miles,
shopping at farmer's markets
growing your own food,
cancel your satellite or cable TV service.
avoid shopping malls, Walmart, and other big box retailers.
take the bus or other mass transit(if you can)
spending less than you make saving the difference.
cutting up your credit cards or keeping them at zero balance and paying them off in full each month.
Refusing to do or even consider any of the above proves that the sneering Cheney is right--our "American way of life" is non-negotiable.
It is so non-negotiable that we, the American people, will tolerate the totalitarian conduct of our present government and "support the troops" as they (in our name) commit mass murder in the Middle East.
That is the true understanding that motivates our elected representatives, as well as the sneering Cheney and his "boy", to which Cyntrhia Tucker has born such eloquent witness.
Anyone who doubts Bush, Cheney, and all their gang of criminals should be staring at the walls of a cell for the rest of their days should check out the videos at this site:
http://tv-links.co.uk/listings/9/4752
Otherwise, i agree with much of the sentiment in the editorial.
Peace,
Ken Hausle
Charlotte, NC
I must say that i fervently disagree with the statement: "The petroleum wars are just beginning."
Spare me that sentiment. Do you really mean what you are saying? Who are you or anyone else to say "a war is just beginning" for there is no such thing as a just war.
Peace is what we need. Solar and wind energy and maybe even some other ideas waiting to be discovered are just around the corner if we choose to make it so.
Peace,
Ken Hausle
Solar electric transportation is four times cheaper than oil power from internal combustion engines. Bush has violently suppressed solar alternatives to oil.