How the Bush Administration's Iraqi Oil Grab Went Awry
Greenspan's Oil Claim in Context
By Dilip Hiro

Here is the sentence in The Age of Turbulence, the 531-page memoir of
former Federal Reserve chief Alan Greenspan, that caused so much
turbulence in Washington last week: "I am saddened that it is
politically inconvenient to acknowledge what everyone knows: the Iraq
war is largely about oil." Honest and accurate, it had the resonance of
the Bill Clinton's election campaign mantra, "It's the economy, stupid."
But, finding himself the target of a White House attack -- an
administration spokesman labeled his comment, "Georgetown cocktail party
analysis" -- Greenspan backtracked under cover of verbose elaboration.
None of this, however, made an iota of difference to the facts on the
ground.

Here is a prosecutor's brief for the position that "the Iraq War is
largely about oil":

The primary evidence indicating that the Bush administration coveted
Iraqi oil from the start comes from two diverse but impeccably reliable
sources: Paul O'Neill, the Treasury Secretary (2001-2003) under
President George W. Bush; and Falah Al Jibury, a well-connected
Iraqi-American oil consultant, who had acted as President Ronald
Reagan's "back channel" to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein during the
Iraq-Iran War of 1980-88. The secondary evidence is from the material
that can be found in such publications as the New York Times and the
Wall Street Journal.

According to O'Neill's memoirs, The Price of Loyalty: George W. Bush,
the White House, and the Education of Paul O'Neill, written by
journalist Ron Suskind and published in 2004, the top item on the agenda
of the National Security Council's first meeting after Bush entered the
Oval Office was Iraq. That was January 30, 2001, more than seven months
before the 9/11 attacks. The next National Security Council (NSC)
meeting on February 1st was devoted exclusively to Iraq.

Advocating "going after Saddam" during the January 30 meeting, Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said, according to O'Neill, "Imagine what the
region would look like without Saddam and with a regime that's aligned
with U.S. interests. It would change everything in the region and
beyond. It would demonstrate what U.S. policy is all about." He then
discussed post-Saddam Iraq -- the Kurds in the north, the oil fields,
and the reconstruction of the country's economy. (Suskind, p. 85)

full: http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/174841/dilip_hiro_it_s_the_oil_stupid

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