Connecting Desis Worldwide

A desi site for desis living in pardes as pardesis  

Home

FEEDBACK

India

Pakistan

Bangladesh

Afghanistan

Advertise

Contact us

           
Search by
The Web DesPardes
 Explore

Articles/Opinions
Astrology
Bangladesh News
Blogs
Calendar
Cartoons
Chanachoor
Classifieds
Courtyard
     Lettingo
Diaspora News
Entertainment
     Bangladesh
     India
     Pakistan
     Snapshots
Fashion
     Catwalk
     News
     Snapshots
Food
     Eating out
     Glossary
     News
     Recipes
     Restaurants
Hottie of the day
India News
Lifestyle
Message Board
Money Transfer
Movies
National Anthems
News Explorer
News Features
Newsmakers
Offbeat
Oscar-Tango

Pakistan News
People
Shop on Line
Snapshots
Sports
    Snapshots
Top Picks
Unzipped
Urdu
Videos
World News Sites
What's in a Name


 IMMIGRATION
IMMIGRATION NEWS
USA
CANADA
AUSTRALIA
NEW ZEALAND

 

BY IRSHAD SALIM

Paper: 'Blood and Oil; How the West Will Make a Killing on Iraqi Oil Riches'

 
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'

ADVERTISEMENT

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'

ADVERTISEMENT

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)
 

Have your say >

More Oscar Tango

CIA rushing resources to hunt Osama
Good Guy, Bad Guy
Washington For Musharraf-Benazir Tango
Why Washington Disappointed Bhutto
Credit Cards and Pakistan
South Asia's Hosni Mubarak - Prez Musharraf
'Blood and Oil; How the West Will Make a Killing on Iraqi Oil Riches'
Pakistan "Next US Nightmare"
Some Americans Turn In Passports
Enlightened Corruption
US Muslim Congressman says will take oath on the Quran
The Latest Coup and Musharraf's 'General' Rule
Karzai's ISI-CIA-Unocal Nexus
Oscar Tangoing Bin Laden's Where about or...Death
More Muslims Arrive in U.S., After 9/11
A Martyr Is Born
Death of a Rebel Leader
Googling "Failure" = George W Bush
Martial Law in Northern Israel
Hellfired to Death!
Beheading the Terror Plot
Toronto Muslims' Turmoil
Potpourris
Pakistan's National Predicament
No Mangoes for Bush in Pakistan
Sniffing n Frisking in Return for Mangoes
Keep On Going My Friend
Bhutto, Musharraf 'Connect'
Brown as Capitol B
Is Canada Conning Desi Immigrants?
How So Asians View US Policies
Gallup Poll Predicts Osama Fate 2006
Animal Immigrants Go Native in U.S.
Day Of Deceit
`Oscar-Tangoing´
`CIA Sent Bhutto to the Gallows´
`Who Killed Gen Zia´
It's a Hot Potato
Flight 77 - Truth or Lie?
F-16s' Hyphenated Opposition
Drones for India, Donuts for Israel
`Deport Muslims´
`X´ Over Dick Cheney
Dubai Chalo!
No U-Turns Please
Dead or Alive
Believe It or Not..
Where Honor Lies
Why Margalla Towers Collapsed
Musharraf's Hannukah
Nukes deterred Indo-Pak war'
A full General is worth Rs 500 million +
Kashmir: 'Sky is the limit'
O' Mukhtar Mai
CPJ condemn attacks on journalists
Advani offered two temples by Pakistan
'Le whore'
Caught with pants down
Don't weep for me
Guantanamo abuse 'videotaped'
Dr Qadeer and the nuclear black market
'U.S. used banned weapons in Fallujah'
'I saw Americans killing detainees'
Bin Laden — a brand you can trust
Oscar-Tango briefly
Dividing Kashmir in 5 parts
Oscar-Tango briefly
Madrid's Burning Building Stands - World Trade Center Falls
Valentine helmet
Pipe dream; Laura Bush 'cover up'
Out of control at Camp Crazy!
Israeli 'spies' drop passport fraud appeals
Oscar-Tango briefly
Eyes on Iran
'Gitmo sex'; Israel's anatomy lessons
Oscar-Tango briefly..
Kissinger's "Bangladesh transcripts"
"ABC" & "Times" of Jersey City slayings
Desi pizza owner's Fra Diavolo scams
Mossad's 200
Pentagon's 'sex bomb'
Venice runs dry
Nauroze for Nowrouzi
Harry the Nazi
Evangelizing Muslim orphans
Mission accomplished: No WMDs
Cyber bullying
House of porn
Is Gonzales fit to be AG
Zarqawi's reported arrest denied
Saudi was mess tent bomber
5,000 Americans unaccounted for
'US had advance warning of tsunami'
Tsunami: Officials ate 'biryani'
After tsunami disaster, reports of child rapes
North Korea warns of nuke showdown
New Jersey man was only 'playing' with laser
Tsunami: US using spy satellites
Exits locked in Argentina nightclub fire
'I ate leaves, licked bark'
..Now the crocodiles are trying to eat me
Vacationing Bush 'insensitive'
Iraq to air footage of Iranian meddling
Quake power
Rumsfeld's Flight 93 remark fuels conspiracy theories
NY bowling alley to return Palestine Auth. investment
Zardari arrested
Guardsman killed Iraqi after sex
Warrior clerics on the loose
Pressure builds on Rumsfeld
44% US population want curbs on Muslims
Briton freed from Gitmo  tells of US abuse
bin Laden calls Saudi rulers 'agents of infidels'
'Target' sells chastity underwears!
Yushchenko poisoned by 'Agent Orange'
Who poisoned Yushchenko?
Florida Sheriff's Deputy fired for urinating in elevator
FBI knew of Guantanamo abuses
Bangalore: Brazilian player scores, then dies
'Kerik the Great' busts
'WTC terror attack movie'
Tenet calls for Internet security
NYTimes Reporter being banned by White House
40 million Indian women are missing!
First female pilot in Saudi Arabia
37 Korean troops convert to Islam
Musharraf's phone call to Nawaz Sharif
Kerry: bin Laden tape beat me
US finds Zarqawi's Iraq headquarters
Saddam's left leg for sale
Serbian chefs go for testicles
Palestinians head to Paris to probe Arafat's death
Margaret Hassan believed dead
Marines rally round Iraq probe comrade
Arafat successor survives assassination attempt
Evangelicals want payback
Arafat probably poisoned, doctor
Arafat's personal doctor calls for autopsy
‘Israel poisoned Arafat’
Yasser Arafat has died
Hostage 'slaughter houses' found in Fallujah
Three family members of Iraqi PM kidnapped
Adviser says Yasser Arafat is near death
When BBC reporter cried for Arafat
Israel admits Hizb Allah drone flight
Ahead of Fallujah battle, US marines turn to God
Indian fuel is neighbors' envy
`The arrival of jihad´ in the Netherlands
100s arrested, interviewed in pre-election terror sweep
 
SEND NEWS TIPS
[ANONYMITY GUARANTEED]

 


Advertisement


Questions?
email us
Copyright © 1999-2006 DesPardes Inc. All Rights Reserved
Site developed & maintained by 
Mamosa Solutions Inc., NJ, USA