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https://peopleandnature.wordpress.com/2024/11/18/oils-history-dissecting-the-many-headed-hydra/
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Oil’s history: dissecting the many-headed hydra
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Review by SIMON PIRANI of Crude Capitalism: oil, corporate power and the making 
of the world market by Adam Hanieh (Verso 2024)

Witnessing genocide can be paralysing. The horror of Israel’s onslaught on the 
civilian population of Gaza seeps in to the spaces in our heads, interrupting 
and disrupting attempts to think.

My memory keeps connecting Gaza to the Vietnam war, news about which filtered 
through to me as a young teenager. My sheltered world was shattered by the 
cruelty with which innocent people were slaughtered and tortured, on the orders 
of governments I had vaguely assumed should protect people. I see teenagers 
going through analogous thought processes now.

( 
https://peopleandnature.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/destruction_of_gaza_1.jpg
 ) The destruction of Gaza. Photo from Wikimedia commons ( 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Destruction_of_Gaza_1.jpg )

How can it be that, half a century on, the grotesque “civilisation” that 
stalked Vietnamese villages has evolved, to produce the monstrous Netanyahu 
regime? What does this tell us about the many-headed hydra we are fighting, and 
humanity’s attempts to resist it?

Adam Hanieh’s book Crude Capitalism dissects one of the hydra’s heads – oil, 
and the corporations and states that use it to reinforce their wealth and power 
– and offers us a view on the part it plays in the whole organism. Reading it 
helped me to think of the horror of Gaza not as an aberration, but as a logical 
outcome of capital’s dominance in the twenty-first century.

Crude Capitalism tackles its big, difficult themes with precision and attention 
to detail. It is beautifully presented and organised.

The first part of the story Hanieh tells, of oil’s initial growth, plays out in 
the early twentieth century, in the US, and to a lesser extent in Iran, 
Azerbaijan and in Latin America. In the second part, from the mid twentieth 
century onwards, Middle Eastern oil resources and the battles for control of 
them loom large. And this is part of the background to the deluge of war crimes 
now being committed against Palestinians.

The connections are not direct. Regimes centred on vicious ethnic cleansing, 
like Netanyahu’s, are produced by capitalism; capitalism thrives on oil. But 
there are multiple mediations. Hanieh’s approach to these is an antidote to the 
simplifications that all too often circulate in radical political circles.

Physical control over oil production was crucial in the early twentieth 
century, but that has long ceased to be the case, Hanieh argues.

In the 1960s and 70s, against the background of powerful anti-colonialist 
movements, control over oil production shifted substantially from the powerful 
US- and European-based multinationals to state-controlled national oil 
companies, in the Middle East above all.

But capital and its state machines adapted. The US, which during the 1950s and 
60s had superceded Britain and France as the dominant imperial power in the 
Middle East, established strategic and military relationships with the Gulf 
states and the Shah’s regime in Iran (at least, until the latter was overthrown 
in 1979). In the 1970s, the Saudi and Iranian monarchies were one pillar of US 
power in the region; Israel was the other.

Brute military force was only one aspect of imperial domination. Crucial, too, 
Hanieh argues, were changes in economic relationships, and in the financial 
system, through which control was maintained over oil revenues.

In the 1960s, oil producer countries’ governments, led by Venezuela, had forced 
through changes in oil pricing that disadvantaged the powerful US companies 
that had stakes in their oil fields. The Saudi monarchy, too, demanded a bigger 
slice of the cake. The US responded by changing its own tax rules so that, 
while more oil money flowed to Riyadh, the largest oil companies continued to 
earn record profits.

In the 1970s, price shocks shattered the monopolistic pricing system that had 
served the biggest companies. Action by the producer nations, coordinated 
through the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), took control 
of prices out of the multinationals’ hands. Crude oil prices quadrupled in 
1973-74, and doubled again in 1979.

In the 1980s, there was further momentous change: oil increasingly became a 
traded commodity; wealth and power poured into intermediary trading firms. The 
oil profits that had once flowed mostly to rich-country corporations were now 
pouring into the Gulf states especially.

( 
https://peopleandnature.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/oil-processing-saudi.webp
 ) Oil refining in Saudi Arabia

These “petro dollars”, flowing to countries outside the circle of imperialist 
powers in unprecedented quantities, became a big factor in financialisation 
(the expansion of international money markets, supercharged by computerised 
trading) and globalisation (the minimisation of capital controls and other 
trade barriers associated with neo-liberal economics).

(Forty years later, the flow is greater than ever. The Gulf states accumulated 
an estimated ( 
https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2022/08/07/an-oil-windfall-offers-gulf-states-one-last-chance-to-splurge?utm_medium=cpc.adword.pd&utm_source=google&ppccampaignID=18156330227&ppcadID=&utm_campaign=a.22brand_pmax&utm_content=conversion.direct-response.anonymous&gclid=CjwKCAjw9pGjBhB-EiwAa5jl3EVQ2-HFJblvaf9ue3Lf6R3fBKqnEhoYFyogdbgdHBlk9pOEaWRtJBoCnIgQAvD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds
 ) two-thirds of a trillion dollars in current account surplus in 2022, when, 
after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, oil prices shot up.)

“Petro dollars” became “euro dollars”, funding that gathered in markets outside 
the US, denominated in its currency. The dollar, the status of which as a 
reserve currency had been endangered when it was unhooked from the gold 
standard in 1971, was reinforced.

> 
> 
> 
> Forms of money and the rise of the euromarkets, the dollar’s position as
> international reserve currency, the dominance of Anglo-American financial
> institutions, the chains of debt and the rise of neoliberal orthodoxy –
> these were not the automatic outcomes of dry economic processes centred in
> north America and Europe, but inextricably linked to the geopolitics of
> oil and the US presence in the Middle East.
> 
> 

By focusing on these “subterranean global roots” of the new financial system, 
Hanieh writes, “it is possible to shift the ways that we usually think about 
the control of oil”.

> 
> 
> 
> This is not simply reducible to territorial power and the ownership of
> foreign oil fields – it is also a question of the control of oil’s wealth.
> 
> 
> 

To understand the killing fields of Gaza, we need to think, on one hand, about 
US military supplies to the Gulf states and Israel and the deranged ideologies 
that propel Israeli soldiers to massacre – and, on the other, about these 
“subterranean roots” that run through the banks, financial centres, trading 
houses and the City of London.

We are dealing with a many-headed hydra that combines wealth, power and terror 
in complex ways.

These relationships belie myths, such as the idea that our enemies fight 
repeated wars for oil. Actually, they rarely do.

The devastating 2003 US- and UK-led invasion of Iraq, Hanieh reminds us in a 
footnote, was “not so much about the seizure of Iraq’s oil as about the 
protection of the Gulf monarchies”.

He quotes another historian of the Middle East, Toby Craig Jones, who pointed 
out that capturing oil and oil fields has not been part of the US’s strategic 
logic for war, “but protecting oil, oil producers, and the flow of oil, has 
been”.

Oil does not just produce cash wealth. Once out of the ground, it is 
transported long distances, usually by ship (itself a hellishly oil-intensive 
business). It is refined into products: tarmac and bitumen; fuels from petrol 
to aviation fuel, the supply of which has shaped military, industrial and 
agricultural practices, and consumer markets, for a century; and ethylene and 
other raw materials for petrochemical plants.

Hanieh, in contrast to other big-picture historians of oil, foregrounds this 
“downstream”. He shows that, from the start, the US and European oil giants’ 
strategy was vertical integration, i.e. control of the whole process, down to 
the petrol stations.

Motor cars, the ultimate consumer good that consumes so much oil, loom large in 
this story. So does the burning of oil in power stations. Hanieh picks out for 
more detailed treatment the petrochemical industry, where oil is used not as an 
energy carrier that can be converted into mechanical motion, heat or 
electricity, but as a raw material.

He traces the origins of petrochemical processing in Germany; its development 
(if that is the right word) during the second world war as an arm of the Nazi 
military machine; and the US’s post-war acquisition of German technologies by 
theft and expropriation. Petrochemicals, while US- and European-dominated 
through the late twentieth century, are expanding rapidly in the Middle East 
and China in the twenty-first.

Fossil-fuel-based plastics and other synthetic materials, Hanieh argues, have 
displaced natural materials such as wood, cotton and rubber. “By decoupling 
commodity production from nature, there was a radical reduction in the time 
taken to produce commodities, and an end to any limits on the quantity and 
diversity of goods produced.”

This was a qualitative transformation: petrochemicals helped capital to achieve 
revolutions in productivity, labour-saving technologies and mass consumption; 
“birthed in war and militarism, they helped constitute a US-centred world 
order”. Our social being is bound up with a seemingly unlimited supply of cheap 
and disposable petrochemicals.

I hope Hanieh’s arguments on petrochemicals are brought to the centre of 
discussions about the transition away from oil, and what that implies for the 
socialist project of confronting and defeating capitalism.

First, the flow of oil as a raw material through the petrochemical industry 
needs to be put in the wider context of the colossal flow through the 
capitalist economy of extracted materials, including metals, minerals, 
concrete, asphalts, and living matter such as biomass and farm animals.

A team led by Fridolin Krausmann recently estimated ( 
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959378017313031?via%3Dihub 
) that the aggregate of these material flows swelled 12 times over between 1900 
and 2015. Eric Pineault has attempted ( 
https://www.plutobooks.com/9780745343778/a-social-ecology-of-capital/ ) to draw 
on this work, and that of ecological economists, to develop a Marxist view of 
this aspect of capital’s earth-shattering drive to expand.

Second, an issue of interpretation. I do not think the petrochemical industry 
“decouples” production from nature: it is another way of processing, and 
reprocessing, materials accessed from nature. Hanieh has, though, pointed to 
something hugely important, and dangerous, in the way that synthetic materials 
corrupt and deform humanity’s relationship with nature. Pinning down exactly 
what should be a concern to us all.

In the final chapter of Crude Capitalism , Hanieh surveys oil companies’ 
response to the threat of climate change. Having spent decades funding climate 
science denial, they have in the last decade reversed their public stance, 
accepted global heating as a fact … and become “enthusiastic converts” to the 
concept of “net zero”, as warped by politicians, that displaces genuine 
greenhouse gas emissions reductions with chimerical techno-fixes, above all 
carbon capture.

“By appearing to transform themselves into part of the solution”, the oil 
companies “not only hide their ongoing centrality to the fossil economy, but 
aim to frame and determine the societal response to climate change”, Hanieh 
warns.

The companies embrace technical false solutions – biomass, electric vehicles 
and hydrogen – that have moved to the centre of establishment climate policy. 
They are betting on expansion of the synthetic consumerist dystopia underpinned 
by petrochemicals. And their Orwellian grip on politics, hand in hand with 
producing-nation dictators, is on display at the international climate talks – 
last year (Abu Dhabi) and this (Azerbaijan) more than ever.

Ecosocialists, who endeavour to bring together the fight to overcome humanity’s 
disastrous rupture with nature with the fight for social justice, must first 
confront the fact that energy production and infrastructure “remain solidly in 
the hands of the largest oil conglomerates”, Hanieh argues.

Secondly, though, we need to acknowledge that while these firms are a “major 
obstacle” to moving away from oil, “they are a manifestation, not a cause, of 
the underlying problem” of capitalist social relations.

Let’s not only recoil in horror at the genocide: let’s also dissect and better 
understand the many-headed hydra. This book helps. 18 November 2024.


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