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Keeping Iraq's Oil In the Ground

Did the U.S. invade Iraq to tap its oil reserves or to make sure they
stayed under the sand?

By Greg Palast

06/14/06 "AlterNet" -- -- World oil production today stands at more than
twice the 15-billion a-year maximum projected by Shell Oil in 1956 --
and reserves are climbing at a faster clip yet. That leaves the
question, Why this war?

Did Dick Cheney send us in to seize the last dwindling supplies?
Unlikely. Our world's petroleum reserves have doubled in just
twenty-five years -- and it is in Shell's and the rest of the industry's
interest that this doubling doesn't happen again. The neo-cons were
hell-bent on raising Iraq's oil production. Big Oil's interest was in
suppressing production, that is, keeping Iraq to its OPEC quota or less.
This raises the question, did the petroleum industry, which had a
direct, if hidden, hand, in promoting invasion, cheerlead for a takeover
of Iraq to prevent overproduction?

It wouldn't be the first time. If oil is what we're looking for, there
are, indeed, extra helpings in Iraq. On paper, Iraq, at 112 billion
proven barrels, has the second largest reserves in OPEC after Saudi
Arabia. That does not make Saudi Arabia happy. Even more important is
that Iraq has fewer than three thousand operating wells... compared to
one million in Texas.

Full at

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13625.htm

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