http://www.counterpunch.org/maass03302007.html
March 30, 2007

The Global Scramble for Black Gold
Oil and the Empire
By ALAN MAASS

The oil men of the Bush administration are trying to set up one of the biggest 
swindles in history--the great Iraq oil robbery.

The cabinet of the new Iraqi government--under pressure from the U.S. occupiers 
who put them in power--approved a law that would undo Iraq's nationalized 
system and give Western oil giants unparalleled access to the country's vast 
reserves.

The oil companies would be guaranteed super-profits--on a scale unknown 
anywhere else in the Middle East--for a period of 20 to 35 years from oil 
pumped out of two-thirds or more of Iraq's oilfields. Meanwhile, Iraqis would 
continue to endure poverty and the devastation of war while sitting atop what 
is estimated to be the third-largest supply of the world's most sought-after 
resource.

The great Iraq oil robbery isn't a done deal. Even if the law is finalized by 
May as expected, the major oil companies say they won't have anything to do 
with production in Iraq until "security" is established--and that would mean a 
success for the occupiers and their Iraqi puppets that the U.S. hasn't been 
able to achieve over the past four years since the invasion.

Still, the law underlines the importance of the scramble for oil to the U.S. 
empire--no matter how much George Bush and his administration deny it with 
claims about spreading "democracy" and making the world safe from terrorism.

The U.S. government's thirst for oil isn't only about profits--and still less 
about securing supplies of a commodity that ordinary Americans depend on--but 
is also about power. In a world in which the economic and military might of 
nations depends significantly on access to oil, more control for the U.S. means 
less control for its rivals.

These dual calculations--securing access for its own needs and controlling the 
access of others--have been central to the history of oil and the U.S. empire, 
from the end of the 19th century, to the start of the 21st.




* * *

During the opening months of the Bush administration in 2001, Dick Cheney 
chaired a task force to set a new course for U.S. energy policy.

Cheney and the White House invited a showdown with Congress by refusing to 
respond to even routine requests for information about the task force--like who 
served on it, and what their recommendations were.

Most people assumed this meant the task force was made up of energy industry 
executives, and their "deliberations" were organized around plotting new ways 
to line their pockets. This turned out to be completely accurate--and certainly 
not unexpected, given the makeup of the new administration.

"It isn't so much under the sway of Big Oil as it is, well, infested top to 
bottom with oil operatives, starting with the president and vice president," 
left-wing journalist Jeffrey St. Clair wrote on the CounterPunch Web Site.

"Eight cabinet members and the National Security Advisor came directly from 
executive jobs in the oil industry, as did 32 other Bush-appointed officials in 
the Office of Management and Budget, Pentagon, State Department and the 
departments of Energy, Agriculture and--most crucially in terms of opening up 
what remains of the American wilderness to the drillers--Interior."

But Cheney and the task force had more on their minds than further deregulation 
or drilling in the Artic National Wildlife Refuge.

They were also laying out the strategic aims of the "war on terror" to come.

It wasn't called the "war on terror" yet. The September 11 attacks would take 
place half a year later, but ultimately, they were only the pretext for 
carrying out long-held plans for a more aggressive U.S. imperialism.

Oil was at the heart of that agenda. Cheney's energy task force concluded that 
declining resources and the rise of potential rivals such as China meant the 
U.S. needed to tighten its grip--most of all, in the Persian Gulf region, which 
sits on more proven reserves of oil than the rest of the world combined.

The task force recommended that the U.S. press allies like Saudi Arabia and 
Kuwait to "open up areas of their energy sectors to foreign investment."

But another focus was Iraq--where oil production remained in a shambles after 
the first Gulf War, and exports were restricted by U.S.-backed United Nations 
sanctions. The task force reportedly examined maps of Iraqi oilfields--and the 
Pentagon produced a memo on "Foreign Suitors For Iraqi Oilfield Contracts" that 
analyzed contractors from dozens of countries and their intentions toward 
exploiting Iraqi's oil if Saddam Hussein's government was overthrown.

The interest in Iraq's oil wasn't new. A Pentagon document made the case that 
an "oil war" was a "legitimate" military option back in 1999--while Bill 
Clinton was still president.

At that time, Dick Cheney was still lurking in the private sector, as the CEO 
of Halliburton, but he clearly agreed with the Democratic administration about 
the importance of oil. "The Middle East, with two-thirds of the oil and the 
lowest cost, is still where the prize lies," he said in a 1999 speech.

Of course, Cheney's industry colleagues lusted after Iraqi oil as a source of 
profits. "Iraq possesses huge reserves of oil and gas...[that] I'd love Chevron 
to have access to," Chevron CEO Kenneth Derr said in 1998.

But Cheney and like-minded "hawks" from previous Republican administrations had 
their minds on a bigger picture. By the end of the 1990s, the newly formed 
Project for a New American Century provided a soapbox for the 
"neoconservatives" who would populate the Bush administration--such as Paul 
Wolfowitz, John Bolton and future Cheney aide Lewis "Scooter" Libby.

"While the unresolved conflict with Iraq provides the immediate justification, 
the need for a substantial American force presence in the Gulf transcends the 
issue of Saddam Hussein," the PNAC hawks declared in a report issued not long 
before the 2000 election. War with Iraq would be part of a plan of "maintaining 
global U.S. pre-eminence...and shaping the international security order in line 
with U.S. principles and interests."

The PNAC dogma became the outline of the Bush Doctrine promoted by the 
administration after the "war on terror" was launched--aggressive use of U.S. 
power to prevent the development of any rivals to the U.S., now and into the 
future.

Pre-emptive war and an expanded U.S. military presence worldwide would be 
necessary to "dissuade potential adversaries from pursuing a military buildup 
in hopes of surpassing, or equaling, the power of the U.S," according to the 
White House's National Security Strategy document issued in 2002.

In this context, oil is a dominant factor--because as important as it is to the 
economic fortunes of any country, it is even more so to their military might.




* * *

No one would doubt the critical importance of oil to the global economy. It 
accounts for 39 percent of global energy consumption, including 95 percent of 
energy used in ground, sea and air transportation. Petroleum is also a basic 
component in a range of products, like plastics and paints, that we take for 
granted today.

"But just as important," as Saman Sepheri wrote in the International Socialist 
Review, "every tank, every airplane--from the B-52 to the stealth bomber--every 
Cruise missile and most warships in the U.S. or any other nation's military 
arsenal rely on oil to wage their terror."

The decisive relationship of war and oil first emerged in the First World War. 
Britain, with its colonial control over Iranian oil, had a decisive advantage 
over the German-led Axis powers, allowing the Allies to "[float] to victory on 
a wave of oil," in the words of Britain's Foreign Secretary Lord Curzon.

By the Second World War, the scramble for oil was a strategic priority on all 
sides. "The Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor to protect their flank as they 
grabbed for the petroleum resources of the East Indies," author Daniel Yergin 
wrote in his history of oil titled The Prize. "Among Hitler's most important 
strategic objectives in the invasion of the Soviet Union was the capture of the 
oil fields in the Caucasus. But America's predominance in oil proved decisive, 
and by the end of the war, German and Japanese fuel tanks were empty."

The U.S. emerged from the war as the dominant world superpower, and a central 
part of its postwar strategy depended on maintaining control over oil 
resources, particularly the vast reserves discovered in the Middle East--"a 
stupendous source of strategic power, and one of the greatest prizes in world 
history," the State Department said in a document.

U.S. companies had been decisive in establishing Saudi Arabia--the first 
"fundamentalist" Islamic state built around the Saud clan. Texaco and Standard 
Oil of California formed the Arab American Oil Company (ARAMCO) to share its 
concessions for exploration and marketing of Saudi oil. ARAMCO and the U.S. 
government ended up creating much of the Saudi state machine from scratch to 
serve their needs.

During the early 1950s, in Iran, the other crucial pillar of Middle East oil 
production, Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadeq nationalized the 
British-controlled Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. The CIA organized a coup to 
overthrow Mossadeq, restoring the brutal regime of the Shah to serve as a 
regional strongman guaranteeing Western oil interests.

The other important surrogate for the U.S. was Israel. Without oil resources 
itself, Israel was a colonial settler state funded with tens of billions of 
dollars in U.S. aid to serve as a military watchdog against any threat to 
Western interests by Arab nationalist regimes.

U.S. power over the region suffered a blow with the 1978-79 revolution that 
toppled the Shah. President Jimmy Carter ordered the creation of a Rapid 
Deployment Force to stop "any attempt by any outside force to gain control of 
the Persian Gulf region [which] will be regarded as an assault on the vital 
interests of the United States."

Meanwhile, the U.S. encouraged neighboring Iraq, under the dictatorship of 
Saddam Hussein and his Baath Party, to invade Iran--and quietly backed the 
decade-long war that followed, at a cost of more than 1 million lives.

When Hussein threatened to slip the leash, invading Kuwait in 1990, George Bush 
Sr. organized a coalition of "the bullied and the bribed" for a war that killed 
hundreds of thousands.

The same priority--on protecting and extending U.S. control over the flow of 
Middle East oil--has continued through the rush to exploit newly available oil 
reserves in the Caspian Sea region, the scheming for a pipeline through 
Afghanistan and beyond.




* * *

The question of who controls the oil is made even more intense by the threat 
that it is drying up. Depending on how pessimistic or optimistic the estimate, 
world production of oil will peak in either the next few years or next few 
decades--at which point, the cost of extracting the remaining oil is expected 
to rise rapidly.

This end-of-oil scenario is emerging as worldwide demand for oil is growing at 
a faster pace than ever.

The U.S. continues to claim the lion's share, accounting for 25 percent of oil 
consumption with just 5 percent of the world's population. But the big 
increases in demand are coming from the developing world's economic powerhouses 
China and India--precisely the nations that sections of the U.S. establishment 
fear could develop into rivals over the coming century.

The stage is thus set for oil to play the same central role in the imperialist 
competition--economic, political and military--between nations in the 21st 
century as it did in the 20th.

In this light, the Bush administration's motivations in pushing for the new 
Iraq oil law are clearer.

For one thing, Iraqi oil production has been hampered by two decades of war and 
sanctions--its reserves will be an important unexploited source as oil becomes 
more scarce.

U.S. companies would love to take advantage of the super-profits guaranteed by 
the production-sharing agreements (PSAs) that the Iraqi government would sign 
under the law.

PSAs are usually used in situations where the oil is difficult to extract, so 
the company's investment in production is substantial. But the opposite is the 
case in Iraq--the cost of extraction is about $1 per barrel, and the selling 
price on the world market is around $60 a barrel. And under the PSA, foreign 
oil companies would be guaranteed 70 percent of the profits--seven times the 
typical share under other contracts in the Middle East.

But that's assuming they get away with it. The Iraqi government is expected to 
approve the oil law, but getting Western oil companies to come in under 
circumstances of a civil war and widespread opposition to the U.S. military 
presence is another matter.

The other aim of the oil law, as left-wing Iraq expert Michael Schwartz put it 
in a recent interview with Socialist Worker, is to give U.S. companies "control 
over the spigots"--so that the U.S. will "get to decide how much is going to 
get pumped at any particular moment, and who it will be sold to." But the 
crisis of the occupation has frustrated this aim as well.

Meanwhile, rather than being intimidated by U.S. power, Iran has benefited from 
Washington's crisis in Iraq, and is more willing than ever to strike out on its 
own. One consequence has been Iran's deeper ties with China--the very country 
the U.S. hoped to force into line with its tightened grip on Persian Gulf oil.

Washington's rulers aren't about to give up, however. For the last century, the 
world's governments have been ready to go to war over oil--and they will again, 
until a new society that places priorities on democracy, freedom and justice is 
established.

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