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The Iraqi Oil Conundrum
Energy and Power in the Middle East
How the mighty have fallen. Just a few years ago, an overconfident Bush administration expected to oust Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, pacify the country, install a compliant client government, privatize the economy, and establish Iraq as the political and military headquarters for a dominating U.S. presence in the Middle East. These successes were, in turn, expected to pave the way for ambitious goals, enshrined in the 2001 report of Vice President Dick Cheney’s secretive task force on energy. That report focused on exploiting Iraq’s monstrous, largely untapped energy reserves -- more than any country other than Saudi Arabia and Iran -- including the quadrupling of Iraq’s capacity to pump oil and the privatization of the production process.
The dream in those distant days was to strip OPEC -- the cartel consisting of the planet’s main petroleum exporters -- of the power to control the oil supply and its price on the world market. As a reward for vastly expanding Iraqi production and freeing its distribution from OPEC’s control, key figures in the Bush administration imagined that the U.S. could skim off a small proportion of that increased oil production to offset the projected $40 billion cost of the invasion and occupation of the country.
All in a year or two.
Unremitting Ambition Tempered by Political and Military Failure
Almost seven years later, it will come as little surprise that things turned out to cost a bit more than expected in Iraq and didn’t work out exactly as imagined. Though the March 2003 invasion quickly ousted Saddam Hussein, the rest of the Bush administration’s ambitious agenda remains largely unfulfilled.
Instead of quickly pacifying a grateful nation and then withdrawing all but 30,000-40,000 American troops (which were to be garrisoned on giant bases far from Iraq’s urban areas), the occupation triggered both Sunni and Shia insurgencies, while U.S. counterinsurgency operations led to massive carnage, a sectarian civil war, the ethnic cleansing of Baghdad, and a humanitarian crisis that featured hundreds of thousands of deaths, four million internal and external refugees, and an unemployment rate that stayed consistently above 50% with all the attendant hunger, disease, and misery one would expect.
In the meantime, the government of Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, fervently supported by the Bush administration and judged by Transparency International to be the fifth most corrupt in the world, has morphed into an ever less reliable client regime. Despite American diktats and desires, it has managed to establish cordial political and economic relationships with Iran, slow the economic privatization process launched by the neocon administrators sent to Baghdad in 2003, and restored itself as the country’s primary employer. It even seems periodically resistant to its designated role as a possible long-term host for an American military strike force in the Middle East.
This resistance was expressed most forcefully when Maliki leveraged the Bush administration into signing a status of forces agreement (SOFA) in 2008 that included a full U.S. military withdrawal by the end of 2011. Maliki even demanded -- and received -- a promise to vacate the five massive “enduring” military bases the Pentagon had constructed -- with their elaborate facilities, populations that reach into the tens of thousands, and virtually no Iraqi presence, even among the thousands of unskilled workers who do the necessary dirty work to keep these “American towns” running.
Despite such setbacks, the Bush administration did not abandon the idea that Iraq might remain the future headquarters for a U.S. presence in the region, nor in the 2008 presidential election did candidate Barack Obama. He, in fact, repeatedly insisted that the Iraqi government should be a strong ally of the U.S. and the most likely host for a 50,000-strong military force that would “allow our troops to strike directly at al-Qaeda wherever it may exist, and demonstrate to international terrorist organizations that they have not driven us from the region.”
Since entering the Oval Office, Obama has not visibly wavered in the commitment to establish Iraq as a key Middle East ally, promising in his State of the Union Address that the U.S. would “continue to partner with the Iraqi people” into the indefinite future. In the same address, however, the president promised that “all of our troops are coming home,” apparently signaling the abandonment of the Bush administration’s military plans. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, on the other hand, has recently voiced a contrary vision, hinting at the possibility that the Iraqis might be interested in negotiating a way around the SOFA agreement to allow U.S. forces to remain in the country after 2011.
Dynamic Paralysis Keeps Iraqi Oil Underground
Iraqi oil, too, has been a focus of Washington’s unremitting ambition tempered by failure. Long before the cost of the war began to lurch toward the current Congressional estimate of $700 billion, the idea of using oil revenues to pay for the invasion had vanished, as had the idea of quadrupling production capacity within a few years. The hope of doing so someday, however, remains alive. Speculation that Iraq’s production could -- in the not too distant future -- exceed that of Saudi Arabia may still represent Washington’s main strategy for postponing future severe global energy shortages.
Even before the attacks of September 11, 2001, the secretive energy task force Vice President Cheney headed was tentatively allocating various oil fields in a future pacified Iraq to key international oil companies. Before the March 2003 invasion, the State Department actually drafted prospective legislation for a post-Hussein government, which would have transferred the control of key oil fields to foreign oil giants. Those companies were then expected to invest the necessary billions in Iraq’s rickety oil industry to boost production to maximum rates.
Not so long after U.S. troops entered Baghdad, the administration’s proconsul, L. Paul Bremer III, enacted the State Department legislation by fiat (and in clear violation of international law, which prohibits occupying powers from changing fundamental legislation in the conquered country). Under the banner of de-Baathification -- the dismantling of Saddam Hussein’s Sunni ruling party -- he also fired oil technicians, engineers, and administrators, leaving behind a skeleton crew of Iraqis to manage existing production (and await the arrival of the oil giants with all their expertise).
Within a short time, many of these pariah professionals had fled to other countries where their skills were valued, creating a brain drain that, for a time, nearly incapacitated the Iraqi oil industry. Bremer then appointed a group of international oil consultants and business executives to a newly created (and UN-sanctioned) Development Fund of Iraq (DFI), which was to oversee all of the country’s oil revenues.
The remaining Iraqi administrators, technicians, and workers soon mounted a remarkably determined and effective multi-front resistance to Bremer’s effort. They were aided in this by a growing insurgency.
In one dramatic episode, Bremer announced the pending transfer of the control of the southern port of Basra (which then handled 80% of the country’s oil exports) from a state-run enterprise to KBR, then a subsidiary of Halliburton, the company Vice President Cheney had once headed. Anticipating that their own jobs would soon disappear in a sea of imported labor, the oil workers immediately struck. KBR quickly withdrew and Bremer abandoned the effort.
In other Bremer initiatives, foreign energy and construction firms did take charge of development, repair, and operations in Iraq’s main oil fields. The results were rarely adequate and often destructive. Contracts for infrastructure repair or renewal were often botched or left incomplete, as international companies ripped out usable or repairable facilities that involved technology alien to them, only to install ultimately incompatible equipment. In one instance, a $5 million pipeline repair became an $80 million “modernization” project that foundered on intractable engineering issues and, three years later, was left incomplete. In more than a few instances, local communities sabotaged such projects, either because they employed foreign workers and technicians instead of Iraqis, or because they were designed to deprive the locals of what they considered their “fair share” of oil revenues.
In the first two years of the occupation, there were more than 200 attacks on oil and gas pipelines. By 2007, 600 acts of sabotage against pipelines and facilities had been recorded.
After an initial flurry of interest, international oil companies sized up the dangers and politely refused Bremer’s invitation to risk billions of dollars on Iraqi energy investments.
After this initial failure, the Bush administration looked for a new strategy to forward its oil ambitions. In late 2004, with Bremer out of the picture, Washington brokered a deal between U.S.-sponsored Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi and the International Monetary Fund. European countries promised to forgive a quarter of the debts accumulated by Saddam Hussein, and the Iraqis promised to implement the U.S. oil plan. But this worked no better than Bremer’s effort. Continued sabotage by insurgents, resistance by Iraqi technicians and workers, and the corrupt ineptitude of the contracting companies made progress impossible. The international oil companies continued to stay away.
In 2007, under direct U.S. pressure, virtually the same law was reluctantly endorsed by Prime Minister Maliki and forwarded to the Iraqi parliament for legislative consideration. Instead of passing it, the parliament established itself as a new center of resistance to the U.S. plan, raising myriad familiar complaints and repeatedly refusing to bring it to a vote. It lies dormant to this day.
This stalemate continued unabated through the Obama administration’s first year in office, as illustrated by a continuing conflict around the pipeline that carries oil from Iraq to Turkey, a source of about 20% of the country’s oil revenues. During the Bremer administration, the U.S. had ended the Saddam-era tradition of allowing local tribes to siphon off a proportion of the oil passing through their territory. The insurgents, viewing this as an act of American theft, undertook systematic sabotage of the pipeline, and -- despite ferocious U.S. military offensives -- it remained closed for all but a few days throughout the next five years.
The pipeline was re-opened in the fall of 2009, when the Iraqi government restored the Saddam-era custom in exchange for an end to sabotage. This has been only partially successful. Shipments have been interrupted by further pipeline attacks, evidently mounted by insurgents who believe oil revenues are illegitimately funding the continuing U.S. occupation. The fragility of the pipeline’s service, even today, is one small sign of ongoing resistance that could be an obstacle to any significant increase in oil production until the U.S. military presence is ended.
The entire six-year saga of American energy dreams, policies, and pressures in Iraq has so far yielded little -- no significant increase in Iraq’s oil production, no increase in its future capacity to produce, and no increase in its energy exports. The grand ambition of transferring actual control of the oil industry into the hands of the international oil companies has proven no less stillborn.
Over the years since the U.S. began its energy campaign, production has actually languished, sometimes falling as much as 40% below the pre-invasion levels of an industry already held together by duct tape and ingenuity. In the Brookings Institution’s latest figures for December 2009, production stood at 2.4 million barrels per day, a full 100,000 barrels lower than the pre-war daily average.
To make matters worse, the price of oil, which had hit historic peaks in early 2008, began to decline. By 2009, with the global economy in tatters, oil prices sank radically and the Iraqi government lacked the revenues to sustain its existing expenditures, let alone find money to repair its devastated infrastructure.
As a result, in early 2009, Maliki’s government began actively, even desperately, seeking ways to hike oil production, even without an oil law in place. That, after all, was the only possible path for an otherwise indigent country with failing agriculture in the midst of a drought of extreme severity to increase the money available for public projects -- or, of course, even more private corruption.
The Oil Companies Make Their Move
In January 2009, the government opened a new chapter in the history of oil production in Iraq when it announced its intention to allow a roster of several dozen international oil firms to bid on development contracts for eight existing oil fields.
The proposed contracts did not, in fact, offer them the kind of control over development and production that the Cheney task force had envisioned back in 2001. Instead, they would be hired to finance, plan, and implement a vast expansion of the country’s production capacity. After repaying their initial investment, the government would reward them at a rate of no more than two dollars for every additional barrel of oil extracted from the fields they worked on. With oil prices expected to remain above $70 a barrel, this meant, once initial costs were repaid, the Iraqi government could expect to take in more than $60 per barrel, which promised a resolution to the country’s ongoing financial crisis.
The major international oil companies initially rejected these terms out of hand, demanding instead complete control over production and payments of approximately $25 per barrel. This initial resistance began to erode, however, when the Chinese National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), a government-owned operation, induced its partner, BP, the huge British oil company, to accept government terms for expanding the Rumaila field near Basra in southern Iraq to one million barrels a day.
The Chinese company, experts believed, could afford to accept such meager returns because of Beijing’s desire to establish a long-term energy relationship with Iraq. This foot-in-the-door contract, China’s leaders evidently hoped, would lead to yet more contracts to explore Iraq’s vast, undeveloped (and possibly as yet undiscovered) oil reserves.
Perhaps threatened by the possibility that Chinese companies might accumulate the bulk of the contracts for Iraq’s richest oil fields, leaving other international firms in the dust, by December a veritable stampede had begun to bid for contracts. In the end, the major winners were state-owned firms from Russia, Japan, Norway, Turkey, South Korea, Angola, and -- of course -- China. The Malaysian national company, Petronas, set a record by participating with six different partners in four of the seven new contracts the Maliki government gave out. Shell and Exxon were the only major oil companies to participate in winning bids; the others were outbid by consortia led by state-owned firms. These results suggest that national oil companies, unlike their profit-maximizing private competitors, were more willing to forego immediate windfalls in exchange for long-term access to Iraqi oil.
On paper, these contracts hold the potential to satisfy one aspect of Washington’s oil hunger, while frustrating another. If fully implemented, they could collectively boost Iraqi production from 2.5 million to 8 million barrels per day in just a few years. They would not, however, deliver control over production (or the bulk of the revenues) to foreign companies, so that Iraq and OPEC could continue, if they wished, to limit production, keep prices high, and wield power on the world stage.
Nevertheless, the centers of resistance to the original U.S. oil policies have voiced opposition to these new contracts. Members of parliament immediately demanded that all contracts be submitted for their approval, which they declared would be withheld unless ironclad protections of Iraqi workers, technicians, and management were included. Iraq’s own state-owned oil companies demanded guarantees that their technicians, engineers, and administrators be trained in the new technologies the foreign companies brought with them, and given escalating operational control over the fields as their skills developed.
The powerful Iraqi oil union opposed the contracts unless they included guarantees that all workers be recruited from Iraq. Local tribal leaders voiced opposition unless they guaranteed a full complement of local workers, and subcontracts for locally based businesses during the development phase. Then there were the insurgents, who continued to oppose oil exports until the U.S. fully withdraws from the country, and expressed their opposition by the 26 bombing attacks they’ve launched on pipelines and oil facilities since September 2009.
Some of these same groups have successfully blocked previous oil initiatives. Unless they are satisfied, they may frustrate the government’s latest bid to make oil gush in Iraq. One warning sign can be seen in the fate of a contract signed with the CNPC in early 2009 that called for the development of the relatively small (one billion barrel) Ahdab oil field near the Iranian border. The language of the original contract met conditions demanded by local leaders and workers, but the work, once begun, generated few local jobs and even fewer local business opportunities. The Chinese instead brought in foreign workers, following the pattern established by U.S. companies involved in Iraqi reconstruction. Eventually, equipment was sabotaged, work undermined, and the project’s viability remains threatened.
The end is not in sight and the outcome still unclear. Will the vast Iraqi oil reserves be developed and sent into the hungry world market any time soon? If they are, who will determine the rate of flow, and so wield the power this decision-making confers? And once this ocean of oil is sold, who will receive the potentially incredible revenues? As with so much else, when it comes to Iraqi oil, the American war has generated so many problems and catastrophes -- and so few answers.
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29 Comments so far
Show AllEv'rybody's talkin' 'bout
Bagism, Shagism, Dragism, Madism, Ragism, Tagism
This-ism, that-ism,
Isn't it the most?
All we are saying is give peace a chance
All we are saying is give peace a chance
(C'mon)
Ev'rybody's talkin' 'bout
Minister, Sinister, Banisters and Canisters,
Bishops, Fishops, Rabbis, and Pop Eyes, Bye bye, Bye byes
All we are saying is give peace a chance
All we are saying is give peace a chance
(Let me tell you now)
Ev'rybody's talkin' 'bout
Revolution, Evolution, Masturbation, Flagellation, Regulation,
Integrations, mediations, United Nations, congratulations
All we are saying is give peace a chance
All we are saying is give peace a chance
Ev'rybody's talkin' 'bout
John and Yoko, Timmy Leary, Rosemary,
Tommy Smothers, Bobby Dylan, Tommy Cooper,
Derek Taylor, Norman Mailer, Alan Ginsberg, Hare Krishna
Hare Hare Krishna
All we are saying is give peace a chance
All we are saying is give peace a chance
--Some old hippy
(Lather, rinse, repeat and then teach it to your kids so they can teach it to their starving, homeless children inhabiting a crashed-biosphere apocalyptic wasteland).
"...starving, homeless children inhabiting a crashed-biosphere apocalyptic wasteland" -- hallelujah! A Visionary among US providing a picture of when unbridled Freedom will once again gallop on Earth's surface...hooray!
All We are saaayying...is...
It's interesting that Colbert made such a scandal of some celebrity using the word "negro."
Here, you have an article that refers to Iraqi lobbyists as "local tribal leaders." Imagine referring to the heads of AIPAC or B'nai Brith as "local tribal leaders."
Funny how a particular vocabulary can dump an entire people into a social caste. I guess this is Michael Schwartz's subtle Orientalism spinning its hegemonic magic.
Schwartz refers to to them as "local tribal leaders" because that's what they are. They are not lobbyists (either paid or politically motivated) but recognized and respected spokesmen/leaders of the families/clans/tribes which still are the dominant social organization in the countryside of Iraq and other countries of the region. They speak for the people of their family/clan/tribe having met with them (a regular occurrence there) and obtained a consensus by discussion, the way in which all decisions are made in Arab societies.
This has nothing to do with "caste," which doesn't exist in Arabia, nor is it "Orientalism," subtle or otherwise, and neither does it represent "hegemonic magic." In fact no Iraqi or any other Arab would fault Schwartz's terminology.
AIPAC and B/Nai Brith are American-Jewish organizations and the idea that one would apply the vocabulary of Iraqi Arabs to them is simply ludicrous on its face.
I wonder if the personal incomes of Bush and Cheney were as much a failure as Iraq?
Call me a pessimist but I suspect their private motivations and ambitions did not meet failure in Iraq and that the war was just one more way for the rich to take more from the poor.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
All the arch-neo-cons are big time oil and war profiteers, from Undead Dick Cheney to Dick Perle to Condileeeeeeza [P]Rice.
Of course they made a fortune. Think it through a wee bit. Just because the was a solid failure in the overall goals of getting the US oil companies in there easily, and the US achieving its takeover for about $50 billion, doesn't mean that Bush, Cheney, et al did not do well personally.
All those failures mentioned in the article still involved US companies like Haliburton, etc., making an incredible killing, often the very reason why after 3 years, for instance, some project was still not finished: because of the gouging and incompetence. But the Blackwaters and Haliburtons (and their investors...Bush, Cheney, Dumsfeld, etc.) made lots of $$$.
This is a very informative article, but I suspect Mr. Schwartz underestimates the coniving greed-lust of the United States of Global Domination and its monarch-loving idiot cousins.
They will find a way to again "rescue" Iraq from itself and (the reason for the war) its oil.
The people of the United States and its allies will continue to pay for All of the costs in Iraq and the multinational corporations will take the monetary profits.
We were deliberately told it would be cheaper than it was and we were deliberately told it would be quicker than it has been and we are deliberately being misled on any intention of the U.S. removing itself until every last drop of oil (and profit) is sucked out of Iraq and the Middle-East.
Looks like yet another oil venture Bush managed to flush down the crapper.
A co-worker, during a site visit to some southern Illinois coal mines, was expressing his various opinions, no doubt mainstream-in-that-area, over lunch in a little pizza joint in Galatia, IL (The only mom-and-pop eating place I saw in that part of the country, but I digress).
I sat, biting my tongue raw, he went on about how the Iraq war may have been based on lies, and only for the oil, but, by gosh, since we invaded the place and spent do much in money and lives, we should at least be getting all the oil!
He then went on about how outrageous that the terrorists would be tried in a civilian court, the global warming environmentalists, The great demon Al Gore, and even the clean Air Act of 1990, which depressed the prices of high sulfur local coal (but they are doing fine now).
And these were probably moderate viewpoints for that neck of the woods.
Come to think of it, they are mainstram viewpoints once you leave my eastern US city limits in any direction.
Yeah, defining humanity's Earth based sticky wicket...for work I've driven a route taking me from Toledo, OH to Fort Wayne Ind. north to Kalamazoo MI and back east to the Detroit Area -- the entire rural swath of that loop is largely populated by the likes of your moderate acquaintance and his friends; the museum of Military Industry north of Fort Wayne was a remarkable eye opener to the engrained of that vast and disturbing mind set...
...I searched Reverend Jeremiah Wright and the top link for defining Black Liberation Theology was for (haven't explored it deeper yet) a white preacher from Grand Rapids MI, the economic elite conservative center (Amway/Devos'), and, I might be mistaken, but also the spawning ground of the likes of Erikkk Prin$$$e...
...add the maelstrom generated by using words like Negro with the wrong or mistaken tonal inflection, as mentioned by qutzelok in this commentary...and there you have it: sticky wicket...or as the main author here states: conundrum.
PJD, given the opportunity and right context, what I will say to these people is "How much are they paying you to repeat such ideas and can I get in on the action because my mortgage is do."
When they respond that they are receiving no payment for such repetitions, I respond in a somewhat incredulous manner that these thoughts all come scripted to the "hired tongues" like Limbaugh and Beck. That, at an instant Google fact check, we see that Rush makes a million $$ a week to tell us how dastardly minimum wage, social security and universal health care (etc.etc.) are.
"The best liars are the one's who repeat the lie but do not know it as a lie, as they did not make up the lie."
I enjoyed reading this very informative article. I have one problem, not with the article itself, but with the repeated general assertions floating about concerning the size of Iraq's oil reserves. Who did the investigations and when? Are these proven reserves? What are the estimates of recoverable reserves? Some of these fields such as the ones at Kirkuk are very old. They were already in use during WW1. During WW2 Iraq was one of the major sources of crude for the British war machine. How much crude is there really in Iraq? Apparently there are no mammoth fields in Iraq comparable to the Saudi giants.
Remember the Berlin to Baghdad Railway, prior to WW1? I wonder if all of the cheap Iraqi oil has been found. Not to say there aren't going to be discoveries, but you have to take into account, at least, 100 years of extraction.
Output of crude plus condensate peaked at 73.72 mbpd in 2005, per the EIA.
An interesting trend noted by westexas at http://www.theoildrum.com/node/6177#comment-585512
2002: 67.16 mbpd & $26
2003: 69.43 mbpd & $31
2004: 72.48 mbpd & $42
2005: 73.72 mbpd & $57
2006: 73.46 mbpd & $66
2007: 73.00 mbpd & $72
2008: 73.71 mbpd & $100
What's most important and flies under most folks radar is net oil exports, and beyond that the amount of exports actually available on the open market as most oil exported is tied to longterm contracts. This amount is falling, which is the main reason for the increase in price--fundamental supply and demand. Iraq is unlikely to have much of an impact on this phenomena for reasons noted in the article AND because Iraq's domestic consumption is likely to absorb quite a lot of the increased production, which is an already visible trend.
The odds are overwhelming tha Iraq's are close to #1 in the world. Other countries' wells have been in service for a long time as well. But... Iraq's flow never went very high, especially because of the war with Iran. Sadam wanted to/would have boosted production as much as he could but the disastrous war slowed everything down. Iraq has barely ever pumped over a couple of million barrels a day. Meanwhile Saudi Arabia has been pumping around 10 for years. (Russia and Iran also pump out a lot, as do some other countries.)
Not only has Iraq not caught up with the modern technology to pump the 6 to 8 (minimum) where it should be, but it has unexplored potential reserves that are almost sure to contain a lot of oil.
Since the imposition of quotas based on reserves, experts claim that it is next to impossible to get an accurate reading on a countries reserves, because everybody has a vested interest in exaggerating their reserves to be able to pump out more oil for more $$$ (as in the case of Saudi A which has those 6000 parasite princes who swallow up a lot of $$$, etc.
Odds cannot be accepted in lieu of hard data. Although Yergin's "The Prize" is several years old now it is still useful reading. This book has made me a skeptic about most if not all fairy-tale stories on crude deposits.
If the US demand for oil wasn't so high, what would we care about Iraqi oil?
Time to get ditch my SUV or get some switchgrass ethanol.
I'd like to direct folks interested in the potentials and pitfalls of Iraq's oil resources and its history to this item, http://www.theoildrum.com/node/6101 where you will find a whole lot of info and discussion.
Two websites that ought to be in everyone's favorites are theoildrum.com and energybulletin.net It doesn't take very much time exploring either to see why.
A relative who is a graduate of Notre Dame still believes that we invaded Iraq because they toppled the Towers in New York.
This is a classic case of the Ivy League Colleges living in a dream world. Who will tell the people the truth?
Over a century and a half ago, Leo Tolstoy quit university without graduating because he said it was elitist and arbitrary. Basically that nothing very real happened there. Bob Dylan, in one of his early songs, called it 'the old folks home at the college'.
More and more, people with Masturbating and Doctoring degrees are complete incompetents and DANGEROUS. Useless bookworm teachers' pets without a lick of real experience or sense about the real world. DANGEROUS because the world is gaga about those silly degrees and these simpletons end up in important jobs where they can do real damage.
Yeah. We really need better businessmen.
Chickenhawk greed monkeys just don't cut it.
Sorry old hippy..........
The Power Elite have no desire for Peace.....David Icke has noted they're speeding up the action: Attacks in Pakistan, Attacks in Yemen, Missles going on the borders of Iran (Oh boy, 12,000 nuclear warheads and over 12,000 missles that can travel more than 3,000 miles versus a nation with 0 Nuclear Warheads and a few missles that might be able to travel 600 miles....Wow,sounds like U.S National Security is finished!) But, best of all Newt Gingrich and Michael Scheuer are saying things like, "Soon, they will attack our cities and things won't change until there are 10,000 dead." (I guess they were not happy with the death toll of 9/11.)
I guess no one really wants to talk about who really created "The Jihad" and who really sent the 100,000 Islamic Militants back to their 43 Islamic Countries to become "Cells of our newly self created enemy." (Operation Cyclone)....
I gather that the billions Bush/Cheney/Petraeus spent on the Sunni Militia was money well spent! Has there been an independent investigation and audit of the money spent in Afghanistan and Iraq??? I didn't think so!
But,the oil companies did have trillions of dollars in profits since 2002!
Be sorry for the Power Elite, not for Some Old Hippy; while life was short for him...he knew at least moments of living in peace and living in the vision of world peace: a monumentally wonderful pleasure!
May all the Saints, Sinners and Various Scallywags, regardless of their shenanigans, know the pleasure of peace!
The worst thing that could happen for present and future Iraqis would be to expand production to eight million barrels per day in the near future, or at any time for that matter.
The faster it is produced, the larger the wasted fraction and the more hyperinflation results and foreign participation is required, the less would be the ultimate recovery, the sooner the reservoirs become exhausted--the ultimate REVENUE recovery is greater when the production rate is lowest, contrary to what big-oil would like you to believe.
There is not an infinite supply in Iraq, maybe 100 billion barrels, at most, using advanced recovery methods. The needs in Iraq are great and long term, especially the need for projects to recover land lost to desertification and convert it back to food production.
Schwartz writes as if to imply that somehow Iraqis owe the "oil hungry world" for costs that have been incurred by war, and, via the transnational oil vampires, needs to maximize production ASAP--he somehow equates this to "development".
It is foreign exploitation, pure and simple, but, what else is new?
The Iraqis as a nation should give their oil workers a great big thanks. Those employees saw what was about to happen almost as soon as that Idiot Bremer opened his mouth and started issuing decrees. It came down to,"Whatever it takes to keep our oil from being stolen".
"The powerful Iraqi oil union opposed the contracts unless they included guarantees that all workers be recruited from Iraq. Local tribal leaders voiced opposition unless they guaranteed a full complement of local workers"
This passage reminds us that there will always be a number of different groups who must pursue their self-interest in a relatively chaotic arena, in perpetuity, in all corners of the globe. It seems like the "natural order of things". However there is one group that does not have a legitimate interest to pursue.
This group is unlike the Iraqi oil union and it is unlike the local Iraqi tribes in the above example. This group I'm referring to isn't trying to preserve its local self-determination like those groups.
This group I'm referring to is the global elite, led by that 1% of "top" Usans who stole 90% of USan wealth. As I said, this group isn't trying to preserve its self-determination. It's trying to steal control over other people, groups, nations. To enslave them, and plunder their resources.
Are the Iraqi oil unions and local tribes trying to steal control over USan self-determination? No.
So I don't think we can't be objective here, as Chris Hedges suggested in another article this week regarding the media. We can't be objective, "fair and balanced". We have to be... biased. B-I-A-S-E-D. Biased against the global elites, led by that "top" 1% of USan elitevil. Does this make sense? Bias against elitevil? I think it is perfectly just and rational.
USan elitevil is fundamentally disadvantaged. Another word for that is doomed. Because I think the people will agree that objectivity isn't applicable toward USan elitevil.
The US invasion of Iraq is a study in the inefficacy of coercion, but I suspect we should be careful in straightforwardly labelling this catastrophe a failure.
Many parties danced this fandango, but different interests in different profit created different parameters for "victory."
Investors and contractors have successfully soaked the US government for huge quantities of money that they will not pay back. They have been more successful in destroying, killing, and torturing than in looting the Iraqis, but since US taxpayers are paying the tab, they can hardly count that as a loss. On top of that, a shortage of oil and high oil prices does not do so badly for oil merchants within the States or for investors with enough liquidity to move with the market.
As to governments and truly large private power brokers, any oil that Iraq does not ship is oil they might access later and largesse for oil they sell now.
There are several possible levels of control over this area that they might count as success. Of course most investors would love to have everything peaceful and complete, humble servitude on the part of the Iraqis with as little mechanism of enforcement as possible. But that does not mean that they count a violent, chaotic, unproductive Iraq as worse than a healthy Iraq producing and trading and under the control of its people - of its Shi-ite majority, primarily.
That could result in alliance not only with Iran, but with Russia, India, China, or Europe, the latter of whom are realistic competitors to US hegemony, at least economically.