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electronicIraq.net
Opinion/Editorial
The Oil Majors Take a Little Sip of the Ol' Patrimony
Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch.com
Jun 22, 2008
More than five years after the invasion of Iraq -- just in case you
were still waiting -- the oil giants finally hit the front page…
Last Thursday, the New York Times led
with this headline: "Deals with Iraq Are Set to Bring Oil Giants Back."
(Subhead: "Rare No-bid Contracts, A Foothold for Western Companies
Seeking Future Rewards.") And who were these four giants? ExxonMobil,
Shell, the French company Total and BP (formerly British Petroleum).
What these firms got were mere "service contracts" -- as in servicing
Iraq's oil fields -- not the sort of "production sharing agreements"
that President Bush's representatives in Baghdad once dreamed of, and
that would have left them in charge of those fields. Still, it was
clearly a start. The Times reporter, Andrew E. Kramer, added
this little detail: "[The contracts] include a provision that could
allow the companies to reap large profits at today's prices: the [Iraqi
oil] ministry and companies are negotiating payment in oil rather than
cash." And here's the curious thing, exactly these four giants "lost
their concessions in Iraq" back in 1972 when that country's oil was
nationalized. Hmmm.
You'd think the Times might have slapped some kind of "we wuz wrong" label on the piece. I mean, remember when the mainstream media, the Times included, seconded the idea that Bush's invasion, whatever it was
about -- weapons of mass destruction or terrorism or liberation or
democracy or bad dictators or… well, no matter -- you could be sure of
one thing: it wasn't about oil. "Oil" wasn't a word worth
including in serious reporting on the invasion and its aftermath, not
even after it turned out that American troops entering Baghdad guarded only the Oil
and Interior Ministries, while the rest of the city was looted. Even
then -- and ever after -- the idea that the Bush administration might
have the slightest urge to control Iraqi oil (or the flow of Middle
Eastern oil via a well-garrisoned Iraq) wasn't worth spending a few
paragraphs of valuable newsprint on.
I always thought that, if Iraq's main product had been video games, sometime in the last five years the Times
(and other major papers) would have had really tough, thoughtful
pieces, asking really tough, thoughtful questions, about the effects of
the invasion and ensuing chaos on our children's lives and the like.
But oil, well... After all, with global demand
for energy on the rise, why would anybody want to invade, conquer,
occupy, and garrison a country that, as Deputy Secretary of Defense
Paul Wolfowitz once observed, "floats on a sea of oil"?
And let's be fair. At the time of the impending invasion, reasonable
people couldn't possibly have imagined that it had anything to do with
oil, not while George W. Bush was politely ignoring the subject, except
when referring obliquely to Iraq's "patrimony" of "natural resources." Forget that our President had had an 11-year career in the energy business (and had been Arbusto-ed);
or that his Vice President had been the CEO of a giant energy services
corporation, Halliburton -- retiring during the presidential campaign
of 2000 with a $34 million severance package;
or that, back in those distant years, he had not hesitated to talk
about the necessity of getting a tad more oil into the international
pipeline. (As he told
an oil industry crowd back in 1999, "By some estimates there will be an
average of two percent annual growth in global oil demand over the
years ahead along with conservatively a three percent natural decline
in production from existing reserves. That means by 2010 we will need
on the order of an additional fifty million barrels a day. So where is
the oil going to come from?" Where indeed? He then answered his own
question: "While many regions of the world offer great oil
opportunities, the Middle East, with two-thirds of the world's oil and
the lowest cost, is still where the prize ultimately lies.")
Or how about the President's national security advisor, who was on the board of Chevron and had a double-hulled oil tanker, the Condoleezza Rice, named
after her in the oh-so-innocent 1990s. Forget as well the Veep's secret
energy task force of 2000 (also starring ExxonMobil and pals) which recommended
that the new administration turn its good offices to convincing Middle
Eastern countries "to open up areas of their energy sectors to foreign
investment." Forget it all and be fair.
After all, the only people who thought that oil might have something to do with the invasion of Iraq weren't on the Times
staff. They weren't, in fact, in the mainstream at all. And, to put
things into context, depending on your estimates, there were only
somewhere between 11 million and 30 million of them marching around in
the streets of cities and towns all over the planet before the
invasion, carrying signs that said
ludicrous, easily dismissible things like: "No Blood for Oil," "How did
USA's oil get under Iraq's sand?" and "Don't trade lives for oil!"
Let's face it: Among those who counted, they -- with their simpleminded
slogans on hand-lettered placards -- just didn't count at all. Not when
everyone who was anyone knew that the world was a much, much, much
subtler and much, much more complicated place. No blood for oil? Sure,
it was short and snappy and easy enough to get on a sign, but also
about as absurdly reductionist, as unsubtle, as uncomplicated as
possible.
I mean, really! And, worse yet, that thoughtless crew of
demonstrators had the nerve to suspect -- prospectively, not
retrospectively -- the worst of the Bush administration, even when
their betters, men (and a few women) with so many years of experience
in the ways of Washington and the world, were ready to give its top
officials the benefit of the doubt. Waving those silly signs, they
actually expected bad things to happen. It didn't seem to matter to
them that the President, Vice President, National Security Advisor, and
Secretary of Defense assured them no such thing was possible; assured
them, in fact, that not to invade would lead to mushroom clouds over American cities and Iraqi unmanned aerial vehicles spraying bio- or chemical weaponry along the east coast of the United States.
No
wonder those masses of naïve demonstrators have been erased from the
blackboard of history. No wonder, since the invasion, the Times
hasn't bothered to attend to them seriously again. No wonder, on the
fifth anniversary of the Bush administration's "cakewalk" to victory in
Baghdad, the newspaper's op-ed page turned to
L. Paul Bremer III, Richard Perle, and others from the crew that got us
into Iraq, or cheered the administration on, to comment on what had
gone wrong, while skipping the crew in the streets that got it right in
the first place.
Now, with a barrel of crude selling at more than quadruple its prewar price, more than double
its price a mere year ago, the oil majors are finally moving in for
the… well, let's not say "kill," let's just say that tasty little sip
of the ol' patrimony.
And, by the way, here's how Times reporter Kramer, in a
single paragraph, managed to (barely) reintroduce those missing prewar
demonstrators, while sidling up to reality and history: "There was
suspicion," he wrote, "among many in the Arab world [notoriously
suspicious types, of course] and among parts of the American public
that the United States had gone to war in Iraq precisely to secure the
oil wealth these contracts seek to extract. The Bush administration has
said that the war was necessary to combat terrorism. It is not clear
what role the United States played in awarding the contracts; there are
still American advisors to Iraq's Oil Ministry."
Arabs with suspicions and unidentified "parts" of the American public,
all in the same sentence. Still sounds dismissible to me. Well, you
know those types. They deserve no less. They're the sorts who might
even be suspicious of "American advisors to Iraq's Oil Ministry," or,
yet more absurdly, of those "no-bid" contracts for the oil majors --
and just because it was in the DNA of the Bush administration to award similar no-bid contracts to corporate cronies like… uh… Halliburton.
But the odds are that "the Iraqis" who awarded those contracts probably
just knew a good idea when they saw one up close and personal over so
many years.
And now, here we are. Sure, it's kinda thoughtless, kinda embarrassing,
and yet so typical of ExxonMobil and Co. not to care about making all
those pundits and knowledgeable observers look really, really bad. What
an unfortunate coincidence, this story breaking just now, don't you
think? I mean, after all that blood, American and Iraqi, has been
spilled, here comes the oil.
It's the sort of thing that could make suspicious Arabs even more so
and give a new life to some really dumb slogans in the U.S. But you
know, sometimes, if you're an oil giant, you just have to bite the
bullet. After all, there's still one heck of a lot of that patrimonial
oil in Iraq's ground. At more than $130 a barrel, someone has to get it
out -- and why not, as Kramer puts it, "western companies with
experience managing large projects"? I mean, after all these years, why
not?
Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of the American Empire Project, runs the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com. The World According to TomDispatch: America in the New Age of Empire
(Verso, 2008), a collection of some of the best pieces from his site,
has just been published. Focusing on what the mainstream media hasn't
covered, it is an alternative history of the mad Bush years. A brief
video in which Engelhardt discusses American mega-bases in Iraq can be
viewed by clicking here.
[Note on further reading: In its follow-up piece on the "no-bid" contracts, the Washington Post added
a fifth oil giant, Chevron, to the list and managed, as well, to
include this already familiar paragraph: "A higher-profile role for
Western companies in Iraq's oil industry is likely to revive
speculation that the Iraq war was motivated by a desire to tap into
reserves that were controlled by foreigners until the 1960s, when the
industry was nationalized. The belief is widespread in the Arab world."
Like some cameo role in a film, this cameo paragraph is evidently all
that's now left of the largest prewar antiwar movement in history. For
some good background on the history of Western exploitation of Iraqi
oil and its subsequent nationalization, check out Juan Cole's "They're Baaack…" at his Informed Comment blog. (And, while you're at it, don't miss his recent devastating description of "the real state of Iraq.") A good source to consult for regular Iraqi oil news is Ben Lando's Iraq Oil Report.]
Copyright 2008 Tom Engelhardt
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