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Crude dudes

`U.S. oil companies just happened to have
billions of dollars they wanted to invest in
undeveloped oil reserves


LINDA MCQUAIG

>From his corner office in the heart of New York's
financial district, Fadel Gheit keeps close tabs
on what goes on inside the boardrooms of the big
oil companies. An oil analyst at the prestigious
Wall Street firm Oppenheimer & Co., the fit,
distinguished-looking Gheit has been watching the
oil industry closely for more than 25 years. 

Selling the modern world's most indispensable
commodity has never been a bad business to be in
� particularly for the small group of companies
that straddle the top of this privileged world.
But never more so than now. 

"Profit-wise, things could not have been better,"
says Gheit, "In the last three years, they died
and went to heaven .... They are all sitting on
the largest piles of cash in their history." 


But to stay rich they have to keep finding new
reserves, and that's getting tougher.
Increasingly it means cutting through permafrost
or drilling deep underwater, at tremendous cost.
"The cheap oil has already been found and
developed and produced and consumed," says Gheit.
"The low-hanging fruit has already been picked."

Well, not all the low-hanging fruit has been
picked. 

Nestled into the heart of the area of heaviest
oil concentration in the world is Iraq,
overflowing with low-hanging fruit. No
permafrost, no deep water. Just giant pools of
oil, right beneath the warm ground. This is fruit
sagging so low, as it were, that it practically
touches the ground under the weight of its
ripeness. 

Not only does Iraq have vast quantities of easily
accessible oil, but its oil is almost untouched.
"Think of Iraq as virgin territory .... This is
bigger than anything Exxon is involved in
currently .... It is the superstar of the
future," says Gheit, "That's why Iraq becomes the
most sought-after real estate on the face of the
earth."


Gheit just smiles at the notion that oil wasn't a
factor in the U.S. invasion of Iraq. He compares
Iraq to Russia, which also has large undeveloped
oil reserves. But Russia has nuclear weapons. "We
can't just go over and ... occupy (Russian) oil
fields," says Gheit. "It's a different ballgame."
Iraq, however, was defenceless, utterly lacking,
ironically, in weapons of mass destruction. And
its location, nestled in between Saudi Arabia and
Iran, made it an ideal place for an ongoing
military presence, from which the U.S. would be
able to control the entire Gulf region. Gheit
smiles again: "Think of Iraq as a military base
with a very large oil reserve underneath .... You
can't ask for better than that." 



There's something almost obscene about a map that
was studied by senior Bush administration
officials and a select group of oil company
executives meeting in secret in the spring of
2001. It doesn't show the kind of detail normally
shown on maps � cities, towns, regions. Rather
its detail is all about Iraq's oil. 

The southwest is neatly divided, for instance,
into nine "Exploration Blocks." Stripped of
political trappings, this map shows a naked Iraq,
with only its ample natural assets in view. It's
like a supermarket meat chart, which identifies
the various parts of a slab of beef so customers
can see the most desirable cuts .... Block 1
might be the striploin, Block 2 and Block 3 are
perhaps some juicy tenderloin, but Block 8 � ahh,
that could be the filet mignon.

The map might seem crass, but it was never meant
for public consumption. It was one of the
documents studied by the ultra-secretive task
force on energy, headed by U.S. Vice-President
Dick Cheney, and it was only released under court
order after a long legal battle waged by the
public interest group Judicial Watch.

Another interesting task force document, also
released under court order over the opposition of
the Bush administration, was a two-page chart
titled "Foreign Suitors for Iraqi Oilfields." It
identifies 63 oil companies from 30 countries and
specifies which Iraqi oil fields each company is
interested in and the status of the company's
negotiations with Saddam Hussein's regime. Among
the companies are Royal Dutch/Shell of the
Netherlands, Russia's Lukoil and France's Total
Elf Aquitaine, which was identified as being
interested in the fabulous, 25-billion-barrrel
Majnoon oil field. Baghdad had "agreed in
principle" to the French company's plans to
develop this succulent slab of Iraq. There goes
the filet mignon into the mouths of the French!

The documents have attracted surprisingly little
attention, despite their possible relevance to
the question of Washington's motives for its
invasion of Iraq � in many ways the defining
event of the post-9/11 world but one whose
purpose remains shrouded in mystery. Even after
the supposed motives for the invasion � weapons
of mass destruction and links to Al Qaeda � have
been thoroughly discredited, talk of oil as a
motive is still greeted with derision. Certainly
any suggestion that private oil interests were in
any way involved is hooted down with charges of
conspiracy theory.

Yet the documents suggest that those who took
part in the Cheney task force � including senior
oil company executives � were very interested in
Iraq's oil and specifically in the danger of it
falling into the hands of eager foreign oil
companies, rather than into the rightful hands of
eager U.S. oil companies. 

As the documents show, prior to the U.S.
invasion, foreign oil companies were nicely
positioned for future involvement in Iraq, while
the major U.S. oil companies, after years of
U.S.-Iraqi hostilities, were largely out of the
picture. Indeed, the U.S. majors would have been
the big losers if U.N. sanctions against Iraq had
simply been lifted. "The U.S. majors stand to
lose if Saddam makes a deal with the U.N. (on
lifting sanctions)," noted a report by Germany's
Deutsche Bank in October 2002.

The disadvantaged position of U.S. oil companies
in Saddam Hussein's Iraq would have presumably
been on the minds of senior oil company
executives when they met secretly with Cheney and
his task force in early 2001. The administration
refuses to divulge exactly who met with the task
force, and continues to fight legal challenges to
force disclosure. However a 2003 report by the
General Accounting Office, the investigative arm
of Congress, concluded that the task force relied
on advice from the oil industry, whose close ties
to the Bush administration are legendary. (George
W. Bush received more money from the oil and gas
industry in 1999 and 2000 than any other U.S.
federal candidate received over the previous
decade.)

The Cheney task force has been widely criticized
for recommending bigger subsidies for the energy
industry, but there's been little focus on its
possible role as a venue for consultations
between Big Oil and the administration about
Iraq. One intriguing piece of evidence pointing
in this direction was a National Security Council
directive, dated February 2001, instructing NSC
staff to co-operate fully with the task force.
The NSC document, reported in The New Yorker
magazine, noted that the task force would be
considering the "melding" of two policy areas:
"the review of operational policies towards rogue
states" and "actions regarding the capture of new
and existing oil and gas fields." This certainly
implies that the Cheney task force was
considering geopolitical questions about actions
related to the capture of oil and gas reserves in
"rogue" states, including presumably Iraq.

It seems likely then that Big Oil, through the
Cheney task force, was involved in discussions
with the administration about getting control of
oil in Iraq. Since Big Oil has sought to distance
itself from the administration's decision to
invade Iraq, this apparent involvement helps
explain the otherwise baffling level of secrecy
surrounding the task force.

It's interesting to note that the Cheney task
force deliberations took place in the first few
months after the Bush administration came to
office � the same time period during which the
new administration was secretly formulating plans
for toppling Saddam. Those early plans were not
publicly disclosed, but we know about them now
due to the publication of several insider
accounts, including that of former Treasury
secretary Paul O'Neill. So, months before the
attacks of 9/11, the Bush White House was already
considering toppling Saddam, and at the same time
it was also keenly studying Iraq's oil fields and
assessing how far along foreign companies were in
their negotiations with Saddam for a piece of
Iraq's oil. 

It's also noteworthy that one person � Dick
Cheney � was pivotal both in advancing the
administration's plans for regime change in Iraq
and in formulating U.S. energy policy. 

As CEO of oil services giant Halliburton Company,
Cheney had been alert to the problem of securing
new sources of oil. Speaking to the London
Petroleum Institute in 1999, while still heading
Halliburton, Cheney had focused on the difficulty
of finding the 50 million extra barrels of oil
per day that he said the world would need by
2010. "Where is it going to come from?" he asked,
and then noted that "the Middle East with
two-thirds of the world's oil and the lowest
cost, is still where the prize ultimately lies." 

Cheney's focus on the Middle East and its oil
continued after he became Bush's powerful
vice-president. Within weeks of the new
administration taking office, Cheney was pushing
forward plans for regime change in Iraq and also
devising a new energy policy which included
getting control of oil reserves in rogue states.
His central role in these two apparently urgent
initiatives is certainly suggestive of a possible
connection between the U.S. invasion of Iraq and
a desire for the country's ample oil reserves �
the very thing that is vehemently denied.



One reason that regime change in Iraq was seen as
offering significant benefits for Big Oil was
that it promised to open up a treasure chest
which had long been sealed � private ownership of
Middle Eastern oil. A small group of major
international oil companies once privately owned
the oil industries of the Middle East. But that
changed in the 1970s when most Middle Eastern
countries (and some elsewhere) nationalized their
oil industries. Today, state-owned companies
control the vast majority of the world's oil
resources. The major international oil companies
control a mere 4 per cent. 

The majors have clearly prospered in the new era,
as developers rather than owners, but there's
little doubt that they'd prefer to regain
ownership of the oil world's Garden of Eden.
"(O)ne of the goals of the oil companies and the
Western powers is to weaken and/or privatize the
world's state oil companies," observes New
York-based economist Michael Tanzer, who advises
Third World governments on energy issues.

The possibility of Iraq's oil being reopened to
private ownership � with the promise of
astonishing profits � attracted considerable
interest in the run-up to the U.S. invasion. In
February 2003, as U.S. Secretary of State Colin
Powell held the world's attention with his
dramatic efforts to make the case that Saddam
posed an imminent threat to international peace,
other parts of the U.S. government were secretly
developing plans to privatize Iraq's oil (among
other assets). A confidential 100-page
contracting document, drawn up by the U.S. Agency
for International Development and the U.S.
Treasury Department, laid out a wide-ranging plan
for a "Mass Privatization Program ... especially
in the oil and supporting industries." 

The Pentagon was also working on plans to open up
Iraq's oil sector. In the fall of 2002, months
before the invasion, the Pentagon retained Philip
Carroll, a former CEO of Shell Oil Co. in Texas,
to draft a strategy for developing Iraqi oil.
Carroll's plans apparently became the basis of a
proposed scheme, which became public shortly
after the war, to redesign Iraq's oil industry
along the lines of a U.S. corporation, with a
chairman, chief executive and a 15-member board
of international advisers. Carroll was chosen by
Washington to serve as chairman, but the plans
were shelved after they encountered stiff
opposition inside Iraq. 

Still, the prospect of privatizing Iraq's oil
remained of great interest to U.S. oil companies,
according to Robert Ebel, from the influential
Washington-based Center for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS). Ebel, former
vice-president of a Dallas-based oil exploration
company, retains close ties to the industry. In
an interview in his Washington office, Ebel said
it was up to Iraq to make its own decisions, but
he made clear that U.S. oil companies would
prefer Iraq abandon its nationalization. "We'd
rather not work with national oil companies,"
Ebel said bluntly, noting that the major oil
companies are prepared to invest the $35 to $40
billion to develop Iraq's reserves in the coming
years. "We're looking for places to invest around
the world. You know, along comes Iraq, and I
think a lot of oil companies would be
disappointed if Iraq were to say `we're going to
do it ourselves' "

Along comes Iraq? 

How fortuitous. U.S. oil companies just happened
to have billions of dollars that they wanted to
invest in undeveloped oil reserves when Iraq
presented itself, ready for invasion. 

Along comes Iraq, indeed. 

In the past 14 decades, we've used up roughly
half of all the oil that the planet has to offer.
No, we're not about to run out of oil. But long
before the oil runs out, it reaches its
production peak. After that, extracting the
remaining oil becomes considerably more difficult
and expensive. 

This notion that oil production has a "peak" was
first conceived in 1956 by geophysicist M. King
Hubbert. He predicted that U.S. oil production
would peak about 1970 � a notion that was scoffed
at at the time. As it turned out, Hubbert was
dead on; U.S. oil production peaked in 1970, and
has been declining ever since. Hubbert's
once-radical notion is now generally accepted. 

For the world as a whole, the peak is fast
approaching. Colin Campbell, one of the world's
leading geologists, estimates the world's peak
will come as soon as 2005 � next year. "There is
only so much crude oil in the world," Campbell
said in a telephone interview from his home in
Ireland, "and the industry has found about 90 per
cent of it." 

All this would be less serious if the world's
appetite for oil were declining in tandem. But
even as the discovery of new oil fields slows
down, the world's consumption speeds up � a
dilemma Cheney highlighted in his speech to the
London Petroleum Institute in 1999. For every new
barrel of oil we find, we are consuming four
already-discovered barrels, according to
Campbell. The arithmetic is not on our side.

Particularly worrisome is the arithmetic as it
applies to the U.S. With its oil production
already long past peak, and yet its oil
consumption rising, the U.S. will inevitably
become more reliant on foreign oil. This is
significant not just for Americans, but for the
world, since the U.S. has long characterized its
access to energy as a matter of "national
security." With its unrivalled military power,
the U.S. will insist on meeting its own voracious
energy needs � and it will be up to the rest of
the world to co-operate with this quest. Period. 

Canada plays a greater role in this
"keep-the-U.S.-energy-beast-fed" scenario than
many Canadians may realize. A three-volume report
prepared by a bipartisan Congressional team and
CSIS, the Washington think tank, highlights how
important Canada is in the U.S. energy picture of
the future. The report, The Geopolitics of Energy
into the 21st Century, notes that Canada is "the
single largest provider of energy to the United
States," and that "Canada is poised to expand
sharply its exports of oil to the United States
in the coming years." 

Fine � as long as Canada doesn't want to change
its mind about this. Well, in fact, Canada can't
change its mind about this � a point celebrated
in the report. When Canada signed the North
American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 1993, we
gave up our right to cut back the amount of oil
we export to the U.S. (unless we cut our own
consumption the same amount). Interestingly,
Mexico, also a party to NAFTA, refused to agree
to this section, and was granted an exemption.

The U.S. report points out that that, under
NAFTA, Canada is not allowed to reduce its
exports of oil (or other energy) to the U.S. in
order to redirect them to Canadian consumers.
Redirecting Canadian oil to Canadians isn't
permitted � regardless of how great the Canadian
need may be. Some outside observers, like Colin
Campbell over in Ireland, find the situation
striking. "You poor Canadians are going to be
left freezing in the dark while they're running
hair dryers in the U.S.," says Campbell. It's a
situation that comforts the U.S. senators,
congressmen and think-tank analysts who wrote the
report. With obvious satisfaction, they conclude:
"There can be no more secure supplier to the
United States than Canada."

Alas, for the U.S., not every part of the world
is as pliant as Canada. Most of the world's oil
is in the Middle East. And while different oil
regions will reach their production peaks at
different times, the Middle East will peak last,
underlying Cheney's point that the region is
where "the prize ultimately lies." Whoever
controls the big oil reserves of the Middle East
will then be positioned to, pretty much, control
the world.

But we're supposed to believe that, as the Bush
administration assessed its options just before
invading Iraq in the spring of 2003, the
advantages of securing vast, untapped oil fields
� in order to guarantee U.S. energy security in a
world of dwindling reserves and to enable U.S.
oil companies to reap untold riches � were far
from mind. What really mattered to those in the
White House, we're told, was liberating the
people of Iraq.

Adapted from It's The Crude, Dude: War Big Oil,
And The Fight For The Planet, by Linda McQuaig,
2004. Published by Doubleday Canada. Reproduced
by arrangement with the Publisher. All rights
reserved. Toronto-based political commentator
Linda McQuaig is a past winner of a National
Newspaper Award and an Atkinson Fellowship for
journalism in public policy. Her column appears
Sundays on the Star's op-ed page.

http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1095545411401&call_pageid=968332188854&col=9683500607




                
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