As the United States gears up for an invasion of Iraq, the great unanswered
question continues to be: Why is the Bush Administration so determined to topple
a government that has been effectively contained by American power for eleven
years?
The White House has offered several reasons to justify an attack on Iraq--Saddam
Hussein is on the verge of obtaining nuclear weapons; an invasion is needed to
prevent the transfer of nuclear, biological and chemical weapons to international
terrorists, and so on. Another factor, however, may be of equal importance--oil.
Two key concerns underlie the Administration's thinking: First, the United States
is becoming dangerously dependent on imported petroleum to meet its daily energy
requirements, and, second, Iraq possesses the world's largest reserves of untapped
petroleum after Saudi Arabia.
The problem of growing US dependence on imported petroleum was first raised
in the National Energy Policy Report, released by the White House in May
2001. Known as "the Cheney report," after its principal author, the Vice President,
the document revealed that imported supplies accounted for half of US oil consumption
in 2000 and will jump to two-thirds in 2020. And despite all the talk of drilling
in Alaska, the report makes one thing clear: Most of America's future oil supplies
will have to come from the Persian Gulf countries, which alone possess sufficient
production potential to meet ever-growing US energy requirements. Thus, the report
calls on the White House to place a high priority on increasing US access to Persian
Gulf supplies.
Growing worries about the stability of Saudi Arabia, principal US supplier
there, heightened by revelations of Saudi extremists' involvement in the September
11 terror attacks, have prompted US strategists to seek a backup should future
instability lead to a drop in Saudi oil production, which could trigger a global
recession. Some strategists have proposed Russia as a backup, others the Caspian
Sea states of Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan. But only one country has the capacity
to substantially increase oil production in the event of a Saudi collapse:
Iraq. With proven reserves of 112 billion barrels of oil (compared with 49 billion
for Russia and 15 billion for the Caspian states), Iraq alone can serve as a backup
for Saudi Arabia. At the same time, control over Iraqi oil would allow US leaders
to more easily ignore Saudi demands for US action on behalf of the Palestinians
and would weaken OPEC's control over oil prices.
Iraq has yet another key attraction for US oil strategists: Whereas most of
Saudi Arabia's major fields have already been explored and claimed, Iraq possesses
vast areas of promising but unexplored hydrocarbon potential. These fields may
harbor the world's largest remaining reservoir of unmapped and unclaimed petroleum--far
exceeding the untapped fields in Alaska, Africa and the Caspian. Whoever gains
possession of these fields will exercise enormous influence over the global energy
markets of the twenty-first century.
Knowing this, and seeking allies for his confrontation with Washington, Saddam
Hussein has begun to parcel out concessions to the most promising fields to oil
firms in Europe, Russia and China. According to the International Energy Agency's
World Energy Outlook for 2001, he has already awarded such contracts for
fields with an estimated potential of 44 billion barrels of oil--an amount equal
to the total reserves of the United States, Canada and Norway (the number-one
European producer) combined. At current rates of about $25 per barrel, that makes
these contracts worth an estimated $1.1 trillion.
And here's the rub: The Iraqi dissidents chosen by Washington to lead the
new regime in Baghdad have threatened to cancel all contracts awarded to firms
in countries that fail to assist in the overthrow of Saddam. "We will review all
of these agreements," said the head of the London office of the Iraqi National
Congress (a dissident umbrella group backed by the United States), and those signed
by Saddam Hussein will be considered invalid unless endorsed by the new government.
Not surprisingly, US oil firms are expected to be awarded most of the Hussein-era
contracts voided by the successor regime.
This could prove to be the biggest oil grab in modern history, providing hundreds
of billions of dollars to US oil firms--many linked to senior officials in the
Bush Administration--and helping to avert a future energy crunch in the United
States. But is oil worth spilling the blood of American soldiers and Iraqi civilians
who get caught in the way? This is the question Congress must ask if we are to
have an honest debate on the merits of invading Iraq.
Michael T. Klare, Five College Professor of Peace and World Security Studies
at Hampshire College, is the defense correspondent of The Nation and author of
Resource Wars: The New Landscape of Global Conflict (Owl).
Copyright © 2002 The Nation
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