http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/061406J.shtml
Greg Palast |
Keeping Iraq's Oil in the Ground
    By Greg Palast
    AlterNet

    Wednesday 14 June 2006

    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.

    That makes the Saudis even unhappier. It would take a decade or 
more, but start drilling in Iraq and its reserves will about double, 
bringing it within gallons of Saudi Arabia's own gargantuan pool. 
Should Iraq drill on that scale, the total, when combined with the 
Saudis', will drown the oil market. That wouldn't make the Texans too 
happy either. So Fadhil Chalabi's plan for Iraq to pump 12 million 
barrels a day, a million more than Saudi Arabia, is not, to use Bob 
Ebel's (Center fro Strategic and International Studies) terminology, 
"ridiculous" from a raw resource view, it is ridiculous politically. 
It would never be permitted. An international industry policy of 
suppressing Iraqi oil production has been in place since 1927. We 
need again to visit that imp called "history."

    It began with a character known as "Mr. 5%"- Calouste Gulbenkian 
- who, in 1925, slicked King Faisal, neophyte ruler of the country 
recently created by Churchill, into giving Gulbenkian's "Iraq 
Petroleum Company" (IPC) exclusive rights to all of Iraq's oil. 
Gulbenkian flipped 95% of his concession to a combine of western oil 
giants: Anglo-Persian, Royal Dutch Shell, CFP of France, and the 
Standard Oil trust companies (now ExxonMobil and its "sisters.") The 
remaining slice Calouste kept for himself - hence, "Mr. 5%."

    The oil majors had a better use for Iraq's oil than drilling it - 
not drilling it. The oil bigs had bought Iraq's concession to seal it 
up and keep it off the market. To please his buyers' wishes, Mr. 5% 
spread out a big map of the Middle East on the floor of a hotel room 
in Belgium and drew a thick red line around the gulf oil fields, 
centered on Iraq. All the oil company executives, gathered in the 
hotel room, signed their name on the red line - vowing not to drill, 
except as a group, within the red-lined zone. No one, therefore, had 
an incentive to cheat and take red-lined oil. All of Iraq's oil, 
sequestered by all, was locked in, and all signers would enjoy a lift 
in worldwide prices. Anglo-Persian Company, now British Petroleum 
(BP), would pump almost all its oil, reasonably, from Persia (Iran). 
Later, the Standard Oil combine, renamed the Arabian-American Oil 
Company (Aramco), would limit almost all its drilling to Saudi 
Arabia. Anglo-Persian (BP) had begun pulling oil from Kirkuk, Iraq, 
in 1927 and, in accordance with the Red-Line Agreement, shared its 
Kirkuk and Basra fields with its IPC group - and drilled no more.

    The following was written three decades ago:

Although its original concession of March 14, 1925, cove- red all of 
Iraq, the Iraq Petroleum Co., under the owner- ship of BP (23.75%), 
Shell (23.75%), CFP [of France] (23.75%), Exxon (11.85%), Mobil 
(11.85%), and [Calouste] Gulbenkian (5.0%), limited its production to 
fields constituting only one-half of 1 percent of the country's total 
area. During the Great Depression, the world was awash with oil and 
greater output from Iraq would simply have driven the price down to 
even lower levels.

    Plus ça change...

    When the British Foreign Office fretted that locking up oil would 
stoke local nationalist anger, BP-IPC agreed privately to pretend to 
drill lots of wells, but make them absurdly shallow and place them 
where, wrote a company manager, "there was no danger of striking 
oil." This systematic suppression of Iraq's production, begun in 
1927, has never ceased. In the early 1960s, Iraq's frustration with 
the British-led oil consortium's failure to pump pushed the nation to 
cancel the BP-Shell-Exxon concession and seize the oil fields. 
Britain was ready to strangle Baghdad, but a cooler, wiser man in the 
White House, John F. Kennedy, told the Brits to back off. President 
Kennedy refused to call Iraq's seizure an "expropriation" akin to 
Castro's seizure of U.S.-owned banana plantations. Kennedy's view was 
that Anglo-American companies had it coming to them because they had 
refused to honor their legal commitment to drill.

    But the freedom Kennedy offered the Iraqis to drill their own oil 
to the maximum was swiftly taken away from them by their Arab 
brethren.

    The OPEC cartel, controlled by Saudi Arabia, capped Iraq's 
production at a sum equal to Iran's, though the Iranian reserves are 
far smaller than Iraq's. The excuse for this quota equality between 
Iraq and Iran was to prevent war between them. It didn't. To keep 
Iraq's Ba'athists from complaining about the limits, Saudi Arabia 
simply bought off the leaders by funding Saddam's war against Iran 
and giving the dictator $7 billion for his "Islamic bomb" program.

    In 1974, a U.S. politician broke the omerta over the suppression 
of Iraq's oil production. It was during the Arab oil embargo that 
Senator Edmund Muskie revealed a secret intelligence report of 
"fantastic" reserves of oil in Iraq undeveloped because U.S. oil 
companies refused to add pipeline capacity. Muskie, who'd just lost a 
bid for the Presidency, was dubbed a "loser" and ignored. The Iranian 
bombing of the Basra fields (1980-88) put a new kink in Iraq's oil 
production. Iraq's frustration under production limits explodes 
periodically.

    In August 1990, Kuwait's craven siphoning of borderland oil 
fields jointly owned with Iraq gave Saddam the excuse to take 
Kuwait's share. Here was Saddam's opportunity to increase Iraq's OPEC 
quota by taking Kuwait's (most assuredly not approved by the U.S.). 
Saddam's plan backfired. The Basra oil fields not crippled by Iran 
were demolished in 1991 by American B-52s. Saddam's petro-military 
overreach into Kuwait gave the West the authority for a more direct 
oil suppression method called the "Sanctions" program, later changed 
to "Oil for Food." Now we get to the real reason for the U.N. embargo 
on Iraqi oil exports. According to the official U.S. position:

Sanctions were critical to preventing Iraq from acquiring equipment 
that could be used to reconstitute banned weapons of mass destruction 
(WMD) programs.

    How odd. If cutting Saddam's allowance was the purpose, then 
sanctions, limiting oil exports, was a very suspect method indeed. 
The nature of the oil market (a cartel) is such that the elimination 
of two million barrels a day increased Saddam's revenue. One might 
conclude that sanctions were less about WMD and more about EPS 
(earnings per share) of oil sellers.

    In other words, there is nothing new under the desert sun. 
Today's fight over how much of Iraq's oil to produce (or suppress) 
simply extends into this century the last century's pump-or-control 
battles. In sum, Big Oil, whether in European or Arab-OPEC dress, has 
done its damned best to keep Iraq's oil buried deep in the ground to 
keep prices high in the air. Iraq has 74 known fields and only 15 in 
production; 526 known "structures" (oil-speak for "pools of oil"), 
only 125 drilled.

    And they won't be drilled, not unless Iraq says, "Mother, may I?" 
to Saudi Arabia, or, as the James Baker/Council on Foreign Relations 
paper says, "Saudi Arabia may punish Iraq." And believe me, Iraq 
wouldn't want that. The decision to expand production has, for now, 
been kept out of Iraqi's hands by the latest method of suppressing 
Iraq's oil flow - the 2003 invasion and resistance to invasion. And 
it has been darn effective. Iraq's output in 2003, 2004 and 2005 was 
less than produced under the restrictive Oil-for-Food Program. 
Whether by design or happenstance, this decline in output has 
resulted in tripling the profits of the five U.S. oil majors to $89 
billion for a single year, 2005, compared to pre-invasion 2002. That 
suggests an interesting arithmetic equation. Big Oil's profits are up 
$89 billion a year in the same period the oil industry boosted 
contributions to Mr. Bush's reelection campaign to roughly $40 
million.

    That would make our president "Mr. 0.05%."

    A History of Oil in Iraq

    Suppressing It, Not Pumping It

* 1925-28 "Mr. 5%" sells his monopoly on Iraq's oil to British 
Petroleum and Exxon, who sign a "Red-Line Agreement" vowing not to 
compete by drilling independently in Iraq.

* 1948 Red-Line Agreement ended, replaced by oil combines' "dog in 
the manger" strategy - taking control of fields, then capping 
production-drilling shallow holes where "there was no danger of 
striking oil."

* 1961 OPEC, founded the year before, places quotas on Iraq's exports 
equal to Iran's, locking in suppression policy.

* 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War. Iran destroys Basra fields. Iraq cannot meet 
OPEC quota. 1991 Desert Storm. Anglo-American bombings cut production.

* 1991-2003 United Nations Oil embargo (zero legal exports) followed 
by Oil-for-Food Program limiting Iraqi sales to 2 million barrels a 
day.

* 2003-? "Insurgents" sabotage Iraq's pipelines and infrastructure.

* 2004 Options for Iraqi OilThe secret plan adopted by U.S. State 
Department overturns Pentagon proposal to massively in crease oil 
production. State Department plan, adopted by government of occupied 
Iraq, limits state oil company to OPEC quotas.

    --------

    This article is excerpted from Greg Palast's new book, Armed 
Madhouse (Dutton Adult, 2006).

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