JAN 7 - The front page of Britain's The Independent on
Sunday features a photo of a US soldier guarding a
burning oilfield in Southern Iraq which was taken on March
23, 2003, three days after the invasion of Iraq officially
began. "The spoils of war" reads a large headline banner in
grey type, with three letters highlighted in black boldface
– taken from the word "spoils" – to spell out "oil."
Four articles based on a draft of an Iraqi law – crafted
with help from the US government – which was leaked to the
paper, detail "How the West will make a killing on Iraqi oil
riches."
"Iraq's massive oil reserves, the third-largest in the
world, are about to be thrown open for large-scale
exploitation by Western oil companies under a controversial
law which is expected to come before the Iraqi parliament
within days," Danny Fortson, Andrew Murray-Watson and Tim
Webb report in the
cover story.
According to the paper, the law "would give big oil
companies such as BP, Shell and Exxon 30-year contracts to
extract Iraqi crude and allow the first large-scale
operation of foreign oil interests in the country since the
industry was nationalized in 1972."
"Supporters say the provision allowing oil companies to
take up to 75 per cent of the profits will last until they
have recouped initial drilling costs," the article
continues. "After that, they would collect about 20 per cent
of all profits, according to industry sources in Iraq. But
that is twice the industry average for such deals."
'Blood and oil'
A
second article begins with the question, "So was this
what the Iraq war was fought for, after all?"
"Now, unnoticed by most amid the furor over civil war in
Iraq and the hanging of Saddam Hussein, the new oil law has
quietly been going through several drafts, and is now on the
point of being presented to the cabinet and then the
parliament in Baghdad," the article continues.
Further along, the article claims that the early draft
had been "circulated to oil companies in July," but that
it's "understood there have been no significant changes made
in the final draft."
The "revelation" of the 30-year contracts "will raise
Iraqi fears that oil companies will be able to exploit its
weak state by securing favorable terms that cannot be
changed in future," the paper surmises.
And, in fact,
an Iraqi survey conducted last April, which was
sponsored by the National Science Foundation, revealed that
76 percent believed that a primary reason the US invaded was
"to control Iraqi oil." A "nationally representative samples
of the population" – 2,701 adult Iraqis – was surveyed in
the "collaborative project between the University of
Michigan Institute for Social Research and Eastern Michigan
University."
"That was followed by 'to build military bases' (41
percent) and 'to help Israel' (32 percent)," David E. Kaplan
wrote for
U.S. News & World Report. "Fewer than 2 percent chose
'to bring democracy to Iraq' as their first choice."
'What they said'
The lengthy second article also contains comments by US
and UK officials, made before and after the invasion,
declaring that the war wasn't about oil and promising that
Iraq's oil revenues belonged to its people and would only be
used for reconstruction purposes.
The paper notes how former Secretary of State Colin
Powell, in a press briefing held in South Africa on
July 10, 2003, responded to a reporter who had asked him
to reply to critics who believed Bush "went into Iraq for
oil" and that the administration was "trying to secure the
west coast of Africa, Liberia, for that same situation,
oil."
Powell responded: "We have not taken one drop of Iraqi
oil for U.S. purposes, or for coalition purposes. Quite the
contrary. We put in place a management system to make sure
that Iraqi oil is brought out of the ground and put onto the
market in order to generate revenue for the Iraqi people.
And we have put in place an auditing system and people who
can oversee what we are doing. And the United States
government is spending a great deal of money to support our
forces over there. It cost a great deal of money to
prosecute this war. But the oil of the Iraqi people belongs
to the Iraqi people; it is their wealth, it will be used for
their benefit. So we did not do it for oil."
A statement Prime Minister Tony Blair
made to Parliament two days before the invasion is also
highlighted: "Oil revenues, which people falsely claim that
we want to seize, should be put in a trust fund for the
Iraqi people."
The article adds that "Vice-President Dick Cheney noted
in 1999, when he was still running Halliburton, an oil
services company, the Middle East is the key to preventing
the world running out of oil," and that as late as
June 14, 2006, President Bush, after returning from
Baghdad said that he had "reminded the government that that
oil belongs to the Iraqi people, and the government has the
responsibility to be good stewards of that valuable asset
and valuable resource."
Thirsting oil giants
A
third article in the paper's business section reports
how the law "will radically redraw the Iraqi oil industry
and throw open the doors to the third-largest oil reserves
in the world," will "allow the first large-scale operation
of foreign oil companies in the country since the industry
was nationalized in 1972," and "would also be a shot in the
arm for the global petroleum industry."
"For more than three decades, foreign oil companies
wanting into Iraq have been like children pressed against
the sweet shop window – desperately seeking to feast on the
goodies but having no way of getting through the door,"
Danny Fortson writes. "That could soon change."
While Exxon, BP and Shell won't "jump into the country
until the security situation stabilizes," Fortson reports
that the industry is "jockeying to stake their claims now
for exploitation later."
"It's a mad rush to get something there," Global Policy
Forum executive director James Paul tells the paper. "The
companies are saying, 'Before any troops are withdrawn, we
have to have these contracts.'"
According to Fortson, the foreign oil companies are
"desperate to get a foot in the door" for three reasons:
First is that "they are struggling to keep production
increasing in line with demand," which has "been driven in
large part by the growth of the Chinese economy." Second is
lower production due to "the tide of oil nationalism in
places such as Venezuela, where the stranglehold applied by
President Hugo Chavez on the industry...has shifted more
pressure on to the rest of the industry. Finally, "the
cost-per-barrel of extracting oil in Iraq is among the
lowest in the world because the reserves are relatively
close to the surface."
'The oil rush'
The
leading article in The Independent on Sunday uses
a quote by former Illinois Republican lawmaker Everett
Dirksen – who was born in 1896 and served for thirty-three
years as a Congressman and the Senate Minority Leader until
his death in 1969 – to explain "the oil rush" by the West:
"The oil can is mightier than the sword."
"Nowhere does this seem more true than in contemporary
Iraq where, despite widespread despair about the war's costs
in terms of blood and treasure, US corporations look set to
be some of the conflict's few winners," the article states.
Further excerpts from the leading article:
#
Of course, the Iraqi oil industry, starved through years
of sanctions and now under constant insurgent attack, badly
needs Western investment. Only a small proportion of Iraq's
known oil fields have been developed, and production still
languishes below pre-invasion levels. The neo-conservative
dream – indulged in by Paul Wolfowitz and Dick Cheney prior
to the conflict – that the invasion and reconstruction would
be self-financed through a twist of the oil taps, dissipated
long ago.
In a country where unemployment has hit 70 per cent, a
policy that will quicken the pace of economic reconstruction
should be universally welcomed. At face value, the measure
is not being imposed by the fiat of a US general: it will be
voted on in the Iraqi parliament and, if passed, enacted by
a democratically elected government. And objections that
foreign companies will steal Iraq's birthright seem faintly
anachronistic in the global economy: specialist engineering
is an international industry these days, and Iraq's command
economy, isolated from the rest of the world, urgently
requires liberalization.
But it doesn't demand the fevered imaginings of a
conspiracy theorist to think that this law, struck while the
beleaguered Iraqi government is facing opposition from all
quarters, protects the interests of oil wealth (which is so
well represented in the White House) more than it does the
Iraqi people. Production sharing agreements don't apply in
most other major Middle Eastern oil producers because they
are widely thought to grant greater control to companies
than governments. With economies so heavily dependent on
oil, it's hard to see how countries can truly be
self-governing if they sign away influence over their almost
exclusive source of wealth.
Legitimate questions must be asked. How did this decision
come to be made? How much pressure was President Nouri al-Maliki
placed under to bend to the American corporate interests?
Conservative US think tanks such as the Heritage Foundation
have been plotting the wholesale privatization of the Iraqi
oil industry for years. Since 2003, the supposed
reconstruction of Iraq by US companies has left a bitter
taste with most Iraqis who see a symbiotic relationship
between the US military and big business that would make a
British district commissioner in imperial Africa blush.
#
Links to all four articles:
Future of Iraq: The spoils of war
Blood and oil: How the West will profit from Iraq's most
precious commodity
Iraq poised to end drought for thirsting oil giants
Leading article: The oil rush
(Above contents sourced from The Raw Story)
|