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Benchmark Boogie: A Guide to the Struggle Over Iraq's Oil

By Antonia Juhasz, AlterNet. Posted July 14, 2007.


Your guide to the ongoing dance between Bush, the Congress, and the Iraqi government; an update on the current status of the proposed oil laws; and some steps you can take to stop the hijacking of Iraq's oil.

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What does a war for oil look like? American troops going into battle with tanks waving "Exxon Mobil" and "Chevron" flags right behind? Are the flags then planted squarely in the ground and the oil beneath officially declared war bounty? Well, some members of the Bush administration and U.S. oil companies may have favored such an approach. But the device ultimately chosen to win this war for oil is only slightly more subtle: a law, to be passed by the Iraqis themselves, which would turn Iraq's oil over to foreign oil companies.

The president's benchmark

The U.S. State Department Iraq Study Group began laying the foundations for the new law prior to the invasion of Iraq. Its recommendations, released only after the invasion, were quickly enshrined in a draft oil law introduced to the interim Iraqi government by the U.S.-appointed interim prime minister of Iraq, Ayad Allawi (a former CIA operative).

The Bush administration has spent four years trying to force successive Iraqi governments to pass the law, referred to as either the "hydrocarbons" or "oil" law. While it has gone through several permutations, the basics have remained the same and have followed the original prescriptions set out by the State Department.

The law would change Iraq's oil system from a nationalized model -- all but closed to U.S. oil companies -- to a privatized model open to foreign corporate control. At least two-thirds of Iraq's oil would be open to foreign oil companies under terms that they usually only dream about, including 30-year-long contracts. (For details of the law, see my March 2007 New York Times Op-Ed, "Whose Oil Is It, Anyway?")

In January, after four years of trying to get the law passed in Iraq, President Bush went public with this demand when he made his "speech to the nation" announcing the "surge" of 20,000 additional American troops to Iraq.

The president explained that the surge would be successful where other U.S. efforts had failed in Iraq because the Iraqi government would be held to a set of specific "benchmarks." Those benchmarks were laid out in a White House Fact Sheet released the same day that explained that the Iraq government had committed to several economic and political measures, including to "enact [a] hydrocarbons law to promote investment, national unity, and reconciliation."

After the speech, the administration increased public pressure on the Iraqi government to pass the law. However, that speech was just about the only time that the president or anyone in the administration would use the word "investment" to describe the law. Instead, the adminstration would refer generally to the law's capacity to bring "national unity and reconciliation" by establishing a mechanism to evenly distribute Iraq's oil revenues among Iraqis on a per capita basis.

With few exceptions, the American press has adopted the adminstration's language and continually and virtually exclusively refers to the oil law as a revenue sharing measure -- ignoring completely the fact that Iraqis would only be able to share the revenues left over after the foreign oil companies received their very sizeable cut.

The pressure worked. In February, the oil law passed what seemed to be the most important hurdle, Iraq's cabinet. The cabinet signed off on the law and agreed to send it to the parliament. However, resistance in the parliament was too great, and the law was not introduced.

The Kurdistan Regional Government posted the February draft of the oil law on its website (PDF). The law has almost nothing to say about oil revenues. In fact, just three sentences of the law addressed this issue, stating that an additional law -- the "federal revenue law" -- would be required to ensure a "fair distribution" of oil revenues.


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Antonia Juhasz, Tarbell Fellow, Oil Change International, is author of The Bush Agenda: Invading the World, One Economy at a Time, now available in paperback, updated with a new afterword. http://www.TheBushAgenda.net.

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Any excuse...
Posted by: Temporary on Jul 14, 2007 12:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wowzers...
Posted by: ateo on Jul 14, 2007 4:30 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am not sure if it's possible to be banned from Alternet (I've pushed the limit a few times).

But death threats?

Hmm, I wonder.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Wowzers... Posted by: CatDad
» RE: Wowzers... Posted by: Malamute
» RE: Wowzers... Posted by: mrcentrist
It would take
Posted by: Lloyd Drako on Jul 14, 2007 6:54 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
a few hundred thousand years at least for the remains of GWB to be broken down into usable fuel, and even then there would probably not be enough for even a single flick of a Bic. Your "comment" illustrates ignorance of how oil is formed, as well as the debasing of political discourse in America.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Come now, let us reason together Posted by: mrcentrist
It Takes MONEY
Posted by: gellero on Jul 14, 2007 2:03 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To exploit natural resources. What's wrong with a 30 year lease to the companies that know how to do it?? The Iraq government was openly elected. If they don't like the status quo, they can do something different. But, as I said, it takes MONEY.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Socialized or privatized, Posted by: Lloyd Drako
» Our dependence on oil Posted by: Lloyd Drako
» Withdrawal Posted by: Lloyd Drako
» RE: Our dependence on oil Posted by: hilaryuk
» RE: Our dependence on oil Posted by: tommy_slothrop
» RE: Our dependence on oil Posted by: Lloyd Drako
» not openly elected Posted by: giles
» RE: It Takes MONEY Posted by: Gma1
» RE: It Takes MONEY Posted by: drcyflowers
» Your a @$$ Posted by: Krain61
No Worries
Posted by: shangrilalad on Jul 14, 2007 4:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Both of our political parties are backing this scam to rob Iraq. The Almighty Republican Establishment is behind it, and everyone else has fallen into line. Those who rule America have “No Worries” about this action because they never have any worries. They live in a world so protected by money, they can’t see disaster coming. They see nothing ahead but opportunity for increased profits.

But nothing is more likely to spread “terrorism” than stealing Iraq’s oil, and Iran has already been selected as our next victim.

It seems this ever expanding global war on terrorism is going to last for a long, long time.

Buckle up Americans, we’re in for bumpy ride.

.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» The Republican Plan Posted by: mrcentrist
» RE: The Republican Plan Posted by: Gma1
» RE: The Republican Plan Posted by: mrcentrist
» RE: The Republican Plan Posted by: mrcentrist
Here's a better guide to dealing with this mess
Posted by: maxpayne on Jul 14, 2007 4:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Fight for your government to do the following:

1. Legalize and allow INDUSTRIAL HEMP to penetrate the market even if it means replacing petroleum all the way.

2. Fund and make affordable alternative renewables such as solar, wind, geothermal, hemp, tidal, etc ...

3. Fund and make public transportation more affordable and enjoyable so that people will not be encouraged to drive their gas guzzlers. Hint: Light rail.

4. Stop condescending people for not conserving and make conservation more motivating and rewarding.

5. Make business, media, and government reform a high priority.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Another way to interpret blood for oil
Posted by: Democritus on Jul 14, 2007 4:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
More than 3,600 Americans have died during our invasion and occupation of Iraq, and Lancet magazine estimates that the Iraqi death toll is approaching one million. We now know that the war wasn't about weapons of mass destruction, nor was it about bringing democracy to Iraq, nor was it about attacking al-qaeda. It was simply about controlling Iraq's oil because the Saudis didn't want our military bases on their land. We now have huge military bases in Iraq. They are designed to protect the foreign oil companies once the "oil laws" are signed by a compliant Iraqi parliament--such laws lending an air of justification for what will rob Iraqis of 50% of oil revenues that could be used to rebuild their country. These foreign companies are not needed. The Iraqis know perfectly well how to get their oil out of the ground and how to market it. The problem with letting them do that is that then all our blood, and the blood of Iraqis will have been wasted. Our government could have achieved access to Iraqi oil by means of diplomacy. Instead, they tried to do it on the cheap, the lives of our soldiers and Iraqi civilians being deemed to be worth less than the profits to be reaped by foreign oil companies. After all, blood is no match for gasoline in powering one's SUV.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» It will get worse Posted by: gbreez
» RE: It will get worse Posted by: Democritus
» Lock up Nancy Pelosi? Posted by: justaguy
Equal opportunity class despotism/ tyranny and class corruption
Posted by: Perfectclue on Jul 14, 2007 5:44 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What does it take?? Multiple Nobel prize winners, Kucinich, and many others?? They have exposed the rot, criminality and corruption of both class parties and their so called imperial corporate "mistakes". It is as Olberamnn wryly commented of the democrats: "They have only streamlined this process", the art of corruption and deception. The hypocritical democrats pretend equal opportunity concern, for oil revenues, distributed equally among ethnic lines, while stealing, corrupting all groups through military threats, to go along with the theft of their oil, exposing them as corporate imperial partners of Bush.

This charade is similiar to the phony democratic choice being rammed down on the public as diverse thugs, like Colin Powell, Condaleeza Rice and Gonzales, all of whom are just class elites, servile to corporate fascism, zionism, and imperial Empire. The corporate media, and the corporate democrats, conspire mightily to keep out Gravels, Kucniich, the real voice of the anti war postition, using the same tactic, to run as equal opportunity class whores, one a woman, one a minority. As apologists for imperial Empire, including Israel's Zionist, fascist cheerleading, through AIPAC, the Israeli lobby, which is pressring Cheney to threaten Iran with nuclear blackmail and aggression, the hide behind their diversity for corporate fascism, in the same way Bush hides behind democracy for Fascism, and Hitler used the word "socialists", like toilet paper, to hide behind Gernan fascism. This is exactly how revolutionary ideologies get corrupted, redefined as failures, by it ideological middle layers, corrupting everything they touch.

These equal opportunity class whores, Clinton, Barack Obama, and others conspire with the Corporate media, to coronate these imperial fascist alternatives, and to shut out Gravels, Kucinich, whle pretending opposition to war and groveling at the feet of AIPAC and Cheney, cheerleading nuclear blackmail and aggression against Iran.

If you think conspiracy is too strong a word, within the context cf class interests, you can see how these corrupt elites try to impose their phony alternatives, equal opportunity class rot, because it was caught on tape, at the NAACP democratic presidential debate where Clinton approaches Edwards. She said: "our guys should talk", translation: our class thugs need to shut out real opposition, and help the Corporate media coronate us, the equal opportunity mercenaries for corporate tyranny and imperilaism. Absolutely nauseating.

As Gravels pointed out: "These people frighten me". The majority of the Democrats voted with Bush on the illegal war, and occupation, and are the same class thugs who threaten the Iraqis, the theft of their oil from Iraq. Military threats and occupation through the puppet CIA regime, while pretending equal concern for all ethnic groups, distribution, while stealing from all of them. This is the same rotten game imposed on the public. The public should stop falling for Barack Obama because he is black or Hillary because she is a Woman. They are still part of the good old white boy network, Corporate thugs, the class whores for Corporate fascsim. class nationalism, Empire and Zionist support. All of this stinks, and minorities, and women should get a clue. Stop buyinig into this equal opportunity class mercenaries, who support this fascism and imperialism. Support the Greens, socialists, and if you must, Kucinich, and Gravels, but not the rot you see here.

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» All I see here Posted by: Lloyd Drako
» Vote for Kucinich Posted by: gbreez
» Best answer I can give Posted by: gbreez
» RE: it's the ecomony Posted by: Ripcord
Flushed down the toilet.
Posted by: shangrilalad on Jul 14, 2007 6:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Flushed down the toilet.

Republicans spend so much time telling us what to think, it’s a wonder they have time to pull-off the swindle of the century, no matter what happens from now until 2199. We have been slaughtered, butchered, cooked, eaten and flushed down the toilet. And that’s just the economic side of the swindle. It’s also cost us thousands of American lives and not a few Iraqis. Cost, because sooner or later we’re all going to get the bill.

One can’t help seeing war as a moral issue, or a whole range of moral issues that determine who we are as a people. And not just who we say we are. Are we above all other people on the earth; are we covered with a sheen of sunscreen that evaporates along with moral values? Maybe it just rubs off from the friction of the daily struggle to survive. Not many Americans suffer from lack of water, or even food, but lots of people do.

Do we see “those people” as human beings?

Some people don’t do much moralizing, which means others have to pickup the slackers.

.

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No worries my arse!
Posted by: Maggieb on Jul 14, 2007 7:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The only way this will continue is if americans refuse to wake up about the candidates on both sides. The pieces of shite that another poster referred to is spot on.

Ron Paul is the only way out of this mess. THE ONLY ONE!

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» RE: No worries my arse! Posted by: Gma1
» RE: No worries my arse! Posted by: mrcentrist
» RE: No worries my arse! Posted by: tommy_slothrop
An Interesting Quote from Dick Cheney well before the 2003 US/UK Invasion of Iraq...
Posted by: yellow on Jul 14, 2007 7:51 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"By 2010, we will need [a further] 50 million barrels a day. The Middle East, with two-thirds of the oil and the lowest cost, is still where the prize lies." -Dick Cheney in London, 1999.

The Hydrocarbons Law approved by the 275 member Iraqi Parlaiment last March approved the use of Production Sharing Agreements (PSAs) which, according to the IAEA, apply to only 12% of the world's oil reserves in cases where there exists great uncertainty about final costs and accessable quantity of oil making for high risk of exploration. This compromises the position of the governments in negotiations.

However, Iraqi oil is the cheapest to exploit, about $1.00/barrel in most places in Iraq compared to a range of $6.00 to $20.00/barrell elsewhere. Iraq's pure, low sulpher content oil is also easy and cheap to refine. In addition, 65 of Iraq's 80 known oil fields are open to exploitation to US/UK oil firms. Foreign oil concerns can earn a 75% profit rate and enjoy 30 year long or more concessions to explore and/or extract and sell Iraqi oil on the world market. Furthermore, it is often estimated that unexplored fields in the Western Anbar province may hold reserves that when combined with existing oil fields would double total current Iraqi oil reserves.

The Iraq War is a war for oil. What don't the skeptics get??

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The Most Telling Line
Posted by: BitcoDavid on Jul 14, 2007 7:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The U.S. State Department Iraq Study Group began laying the foundations for the new law prior to the invasion of Iraq. (emphasis mine)

This is the most telling line in the above piece. Any doubt in the minds of supporters of the Bush Regime, as to the real purpose behind this sham, should be, now, washed away.

It has always been my belief that this war was on the menu long before Sept. 11th.

It is an unmentionable taboo, considered to be the ramblings of conspiracy theorists and delusional paranoiacs, that Bush himself was complicit in, if not responsible for, those aforementioned attacks.

My greatest fear, at this point, is that we will suffer another "attack" just prior to the '08 elections. Bush will be "forced" to declare martial law, suspend the election and we will finally be subjected to his police state agenda.

The rule of theocratic fascism will replace Democracy in America.

The Administration, with the help of former administrations, including that of Bill Clinton, have been quietly putting policies into place, that will allow this to happen.

The only way we can prevent this is to impeach Bush and Cheyney now, charge them with, and imprison them for, war crimes, while we still have a chance. We must then begin a united, and fully nationalized program, to repair and undo the damage done by the neocons, to our Democracy and our Republic.

Such a program would involve amendment to the constitution, overhaul and reform of the Electoral College and removal of all the Bush appointees to the Supreme Court.

As a Nation, we must stop focusing on trivial details, and begin focusing on the overall picture. We are in very real jeopardy of loosing our Democracy, and once those vital liberties are gone, we will never get them back.

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» RE: The Most Telling Line Posted by: Schroeder
First the military seizure, then the PSAs, now Iraqi debt and bogus laws...
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Jul 14, 2007 8:45 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The real history of the Iraqi oil war needs to be written. Some high points include:

1) The military seizure of the oilfields and terminals. The stated goal was to prevent Saddam from setting the oilfields on fire. The real goal was made obvious by the military occupation of the Oil Ministry in Baghdad.

2) The initial neocon plan for Production Sharing Agreements. These are used by oil companies in countries where oil recovery is speculative or very expensive. The opposite is true for Iraq, which has 115 barrels of proven reserves, possibly twice that in undiscovered fields, and which has the lowest cost of production of any place on the planet. The oil comes out for $1/barrel, gets sold on the world market at $60/barrel... can you say 'profit margin'?

3) The failure of the PSA scheme and the implementation of the Iraqi debt-for-oil program, to be managed by BearingPoint, and the IMF loansharking system. The new oil law includes no mention of PSAs, but this is deceptive. The authority to create PSAs is simply put in the hands of a 'committee' - it is no longer explicitly spelled out. Laws that create committees that secretly pass new laws...

4) Iraq's odious debt and war reparations. These were run up by Saddam Hussein, first during his US-supported war against Iran and then as a result of Gulf War I. This is the club that the Saudis, Kuwaitis, and the US-British oil axis are trying to use to ensure control of Iraqi oil for the foreseeable future. See Schwarz on Iraqi oil.

There are a couple of articles in the new oil law that really spell this out:

Article 8: Field Development and Oil and Gas Exploration, C: The Ministry prepares model Exploration and Production contracts to be approved by the Federal Oil and Gas Council and to be appended to this law. These model contracts must guarantee the best levels of coordination between the Oil Ministry, INOC, and the Regions each according to their specific responsibility in relation to both this Law and the international oil companies.

The real power is thus in the Oil Ministry and in the Federal Oil and Gas Council, also created by the law. It's unclear, but it looks like members of the international oil corporations are given seats on the Iraq FOGC. Control of all Iraqi oil is thus put in the hands of a very small group of Iraqi puppets.

Article 20: Restrictions on Production Levels
In the event that, for national policy considerations, there is a need to introduce limitations on the national level of Petroleum Production, such limitations shall be applied in a fair and equitable manner and on a pro-rata basis for each Contract Area on the basis of approved Field Development Plans.


This is the money clause that reveals the problem with Iraq in the eyes of the global oil cartel. They have the most oil, and they have the cheapest and highest quality oil. They could be the last of the swing producers, a role once played by Texas, then by Saudi Arabia. Who will be in control? Who will set the global price of oil for the next 20 years?

The only solution to this mess is to get off oil and to switch to clean domestic renewables. Oil supplies will get tighter and tighter, and the struggle for control and access will only get more violent. In spite of all this, Chevron and other US oil corporations are currently expanding refinery capacity and planning on increased US reliance on imported oil.

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We don't belong in Iraq or any other country!!!
Posted by: symcokid on Jul 14, 2007 8:54 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We are not entitled to their oil and we need to start respecting other nation's religions and lifestyles.

The so called insurgents aren't terrorists. They are their country's militia men. The U.S. had militia men and they fought the queen's armies when they came to take away our land and freedoms - after we stole it all from the Native Indians, that is! Our militia were called patriots, think about that!

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Now that the cat's out of the bag
Posted by: willymack on Jul 14, 2007 8:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The REAL reason for the Iraq "war" should be apparent to even the mouth breathers and inbred bush boosters. How do you like your "decider", now, you pathetic numbskulls? How do you like the fact that the bush crime family has needlessly slaughtered hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians, thousands of our own people, swept our Constitution under the rug with 9/11 as an excuse, when they're almost certain to be proven to be guilty of that too? Can you possibly channel your righteous anger against the REAL enemies of our people-the bushies, or would you rather just keep on parroting the neothug talking points you hear on faux "news" and the other fathead forums? Are you patriotic enough to admit your stupidity and join the rest of us in demanding Congress arrest, try, and imprison the vile nest of vipers responsible for a multitude of crimes against humanity and our people, or are you too busy watching "reality" shows, while the REAL realities are right there in front of your nose? Well, what's your answer? Are you ready to become responsible citizens again and help the rest of us take out the trash or you merely going to roll over and go back to sleep? So many fools; so few meteors.

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It's more clear now, if it wasn't before
Posted by: mountainmama on Jul 14, 2007 9:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
that this whole plan of Adolph Bush and his regime has been about oil. DUH! But to go a step further, after reading "Confessions of an Economic Hit Man" by John Perkins a new revelation and expansion of it all became clear. We go into Iraq to make a mess...on purpose...and then offer to help them become a "democratic" country and clean up in exchange for control of the oil. HENCE...the reason Bushco have been so intent on "staying the course" - until they get what they want. Don't think they counted on what followed though. So, yes, we would be better off all around if we got out and got out now. But that will never happen as Bush/Cheney are determined to get what they want! Control oil, power to control the world basically!

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technical difficulties
Posted by: bugs on Jul 14, 2007 10:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Looks like a piece got cut out of the story:

At the bottom of page 2 it says "In fact, the current draft of the revenue law (p>"

Then page 3 continues with "None of these incongruities has dulled the interest of the Bush administration in the revenue law."

There's a similar problem in the print version.

Any Alternet staff out there who can give us the missing piece? Thanks!

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» The Missing Text Posted by: juhasza
The corruptive nature of American oil companies: a personal observation.
Posted by: HughScott on Jul 14, 2007 10:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For the benefit of new AlterNet visitors, this is a repeat of a comment I posted several days ago in regard to U.S. petroleum companies and their ties to Iraq.

In 1956, before entering the Air Force, I worked as a seismologist for the Atlantic Refining Company (ARCO). By doing so, I followed the footsteps of my late father, Ed Scott, a career geologist and high level executive for Union Oil of California, now Unocal. Decades later, in 2004, I wrote about Dad in my narrative nonfiction book, George Dub-ya Bush, THE PHONY FIGHTER PILOT, to point the destructive influence oilmen have had on U.S. foreign policy.

I already knew Bush and Cheney had worked in the petroleum business before winning the White House. But imagine my surprise upon learning that our UN ambassador and former Iraq ambassador, Zalmay Khalilzad, had been a Unocal consultant.

Also noteworthy was Khalilzad’s membership in the neocon front organization, Project for a New American Century (PNAC), along with Gulf War 2 architects Cheney, Don Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz and Scooter Libby. President Bush is connected to PNAC through his brother, Jeb, an original member.

Another PNAC founder, Steve Forbes, has publicly stated that he wants the IMF out of Iraq and American oil companies in.

Getting back to Khalilzad, in addition to his Unocal relationship, he was a Chevron board member. When Bush 41 was president, Khalilzad worked for Wolfowitz in the Defense Department. Prior to Gulf War 1, both men advocated the use of military force to overthrow Saddam Hussein.

After Khalilzad left the DOD, he worked for the Rand Corporation, a rightwing think tank that performed research for the U.S. military, DOD and American intelligence community. Not surprisingly, Unocal was also a Rand client.

While consulting for Unocal, Khalilzad participated in talks with the Taliban on Afghan oil and gas pipeline infrastructure, escorted a delegation of Taliban leaders that visited Unocal headquarters in Texas, and called for the United States to support their regime.

During the Clinton years, Khalilzad conducted risk assessments for Unocal on their proposed 900-mile pipeline project to transport natural gas from Turkmenistan to Pakistan through Afghanistan. Even as the Clinton administration began to recognize the repressive nature of the Taliban regime and its links to Osama Bin Laden, Khalilzad called for U.S. engagement with the Taliban.

Unocal also hired Henry Kissinger and former U.S. ambassador John Maresca for advisory work. Marcesca later became a Unocal vice president. Additionally, Unocal employed Robert Oakley, former U.S. ambassador to Pakistan, as a Middle East consultant.

Another Bush buddy, Richard Armitage -- PNAC member, Valerie Plame leaker and Colin Powell’s Deputy Secretary of State -- also performed Unocal contract work. No stranger to the pipeline business, Armitage was a member of the Burma/Myanmar Forum, a group that received major funding from Unocal. In 1997, he was implicated in a lawsuit filed by Burmese villagers who suffered human rights abuses during the construction of a Unocal pipeline. Halliburton, under Dick Cheney, also performed contract work on the Burmese project.

I could go on and on about the White House being controlled by oil company executives, but instead, I will relate the feelings expressed by my father, as told to me many times.

The influence on government energy policies by American petroleum companies would have concerned him greatly. If alive today, Ed Scott would be the first to say that oilmen are greedy people, care little about social issues and pledge loyalty to themselves, not the U.S. Constitution. To me, that pretty much sums up the Bush administration and why we are quagmired in Iraq.

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Don't give PNAC Oil warriors all the credit
Posted by: mcooley on Jul 14, 2007 11:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Even before PNAC/Cheney's Peak Oil warrior plans....there was:
“A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm”
http://tinyurl.com/24wmf7

Excerpts:

"Israel can shape its strategic environment, in cooperation with Turkey and Jordan, by weakening, containing, and even rolling back Syria. This effort can focus on removing Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq — an important Israeli strategic objective in its own right — as a means of foiling Syria’s regional ambitions."

"Syria challenges Israel on Lebanese soil. An effective approach, and one with which American can sympathize, would be if Israel seized the strategic initiative along its northern borders by engaging Hizballah, Syria, and Iran,as the principal agents of aggression in Lebanon"

It’s authors include Richard Perle, David Wurmser and Douglas Feith. You may recall that Douglas Feith was implicated (along w/ Paul Wolfowitz) in the Israeli Spy scandal, and he was the traitor in Rumsfeld’s OSP who created the false Iraq Intel that helped LIE our Nation into war.
Feith created VIP status to Israeli generals who waltzed through the US Pentagon like they owned the place:

“The Spies Who Pushed For War”
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,999737,00.html

“….The OSP was an open and largely unfiltered conduit to the White House not only for the Iraqi opposition. It also forged close ties to a parallel, ad hoc intelligence operation inside Ariel Sharon's office in Israel specifically to bypass Mossad and provide the Bush administration with more alarmist reports on Saddam's Iraq than Mossad was prepared to authorise.
"None of the Israelis who came were cleared into the Pentagon through normal channels," said one source familiar with the visits. Instead, they were waved in on Mr Feith's authority without having to fill in the usual forms.
The exchange of information continued a long-standing relationship Mr Feith and other Washington neo-conservatives had with Israel's Likud party.
In 1996, he and Richard Perle - now an influential Pentagon figure - served as advisers to the then Likud leader, Binyamin Netanyahu. In a policy paper they wrote ... the two advisers said that Saddam would have to be destroyed, and Syria, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, and Iran would have to be overthrown or destabilised, for Israel to be truly safe….”

Could this explain primarily why we invaded Iraq, seem hellbent on invading Iran, and why we helped bomb Lebanon last summer, to the horror/disgust of the rest of the world? How was Lebanon affecting our invasion/conquest of Iraq's Oil - and why did we Overnight Rush Deliver even more cluster bombs to Israel to continue decimating Lebanese civilians/infrustructure (ie: war crimes) even after the world demanded a cease fire?

“Serving Two Flags - Neo-Cons, Israel and the Bush Administration”
http://www.counterpunch.org/green02282004.html
(second half describes how cozy Perle, Feith, and Wolfowitz are)

Considering that a large % of PNAC members are Zionists, could PNAC’s RAD have been a camouflaged version of A Clean Break, intended for consumption by and with inspiration for the US Military Industrial Complex and Cheney's secret energy cabal?
What a dream team of partners in crime that would be!
Secure Israel + Steal All the Oil for the US + Make Lots of Money Doing Both….and as a bonus make 30% of the US population delighted in anticipating Armageddon!
Who is pulling ALL the strings?
OIL is often cited as the obvious "justification" for US imperialism in the Middle East, with Iraqi and Iranian Oil being the big prize.

But then why do we also hear about the need to attack Lebanon and Syria?

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» sorry about bad links above Posted by: mcooley
lastmarx
Posted by: lastmarx1 on Jul 14, 2007 2:00 PM   
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I propose that a major forum present a discussion on "The Role of Oil in the Iraq War." This should not be simply an opportunity to reflect my own view that "it's all about oil," but rather a serious consideration of the current state of documentary and existential information on the topic.

It would be essential to include some of the popular pundits and policy makers who have po-poohed the importance of oil as a factor in the decision to invade Iraq (as the WashPo's Rajiv Chandrasekaran did on C-SPAN today). On the other side, how about Ted Koppel ("Will Fight for Oil," NYT oped 2/24/06), one of the very few prominent pundits who believe it is at least important. Also, a presentation of this important material.

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lastmarx
Posted by: lastmarx1 on Jul 14, 2007 2:01 PM   
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I propose that a major forum present a discussion on "The Role of Oil in the Iraq War." This should not be simply an opportunity to reflect my own view that "it's all about oil," but rather a serious consideration of the current state of documentary and existential information on the topic.

It would be essential to include some of the popular pundits and policy makers who have po-poohed the importance of oil as a factor in the decision to invade Iraq (as the WashPo's Rajiv Chandrasekaran did on C-SPAN today). On the other side, how about Ted Koppel ("Will Fight for Oil," NYT oped 2/24/06), one of the very few prominent pundits who believe it is at least important. Also, a presentation of this important material.

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What does a war for oil look like?
Posted by: motamanx on Jul 14, 2007 5:10 PM   
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It looks like the face of Dick Cheney.

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It ain't over
Posted by: Temporary on Jul 14, 2007 7:34 PM   
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till the...

FAT LADY sings!

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Sam
Posted by: vssmith on Jul 15, 2007 3:27 AM   
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How come we are not being asked to drive 55 mph--a rhetorical question.

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thanks hugh
Posted by: richholland on Jul 15, 2007 3:56 AM   
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as an European (brainwashed from childhood, to be gratefull for all the good things from USA; freedo mfrom the Nazis, Plastics, Movies, Cars etc etc.0
it is good to read your background info.
Go on.

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The lives lost
Posted by: Temporary on Jul 15, 2007 8:23 AM   
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both black...

and white!

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KRG says move forward and address oil law
Posted by: waterislifeaguaesvida on Jul 15, 2007 1:48 PM   
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KRG.org, 17:05:32 15 Jul. 2007
Prime Minister Barzani calls on Iraq federal government to move forward on agreed revenue sharing and oil laws


Erbil, Kurdistan Region-Iraq (KRG.org) - Mr Nechirvan Barzani, Prime Minister of the Kurdistan Region, today called upon the federal government to move quickly and take the agreed draft Revenue Sharing Law and agreed draft Oil and Gas Law to the Council of Representatives (Iraq’s federal parliament).

He said, “The sooner the agreed drafts are enacted into law, the better for all Iraqi peoples. While this law is vital for Iraqis, it is also important that we demonstrate to the international community that we are capable of bringing this law into action.”

“We are concerned that the agreed drafts have been bogged down in an obscure committee in Baghdad - called the ‘Shura Council’, which has made unauthorised material changes to the agreed drafts, apparently in consultation with unnamed oil ministry officials in Baghdad. This is not acceptable. It is a delaying tactic that must be swept aside. The agreed drafts must be reinstated and put to the Parliament.”

The Prime Minister added, “Kurdistan Alliance members in the federal parliament are anxious to move forward on the texts to which the KRG and the federal government agreed. We encourage other political blocs who care about the viability of a federal Iraq to take a similar attitude, so that these two important laws can be enacted as soon as possible”.

The draft Revenue Sharing Law will, when enacted, provide for the sharing of all petroleum revenue, wherever derived, to be shared on a per capita basis throughout Iraq, with a guaranteed allocation for the Kurdistan Region. The draft Oil and Gas Law will establish the basis for cooperative petroleum management throughout Iraq, with the Kurdistan Region voluntarily delegating some of its constitutional petroleum powers to a Federal Oil and Gas Council.

The draft Revenue Sharing Law was agreed between the KRG and the federal authorities on 20 June. The draft Oil and Gas Law was agreed between the Kurdistan Regional Government and the federal government, and approved by the Iraq Council of Ministers, in February this year.

The draft Iraq Revenue Sharing Law is available in English and Arabic. The draft Iraq Oil and Gas Law is available in English and Arabic.

For inquiries, please contact spokesman(at)krg.

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the middle east have been down this path before...
Posted by: eosrk on Jul 15, 2007 9:42 PM   
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with western nations, and henceforce is why OPEC was formed by its founders, Iran and Iraq, led by no other than.....Saddam Hussein himself back in the late 60's to early 70's.

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Unite1
Posted by: Unite1 on Jul 18, 2007 5:05 PM   
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I keep thinking that the American public is going to wake up and realize what this administration has done and continues to do to us, to our country, and to the citizens of Iraq. Two things that I personally am doing are:
1.) Talking up bringing charges of impeachment against Bush and Cheney. I am e-mailing my representatives in Congress, my friends, my acquaintances, talk show hosts, radio hosts, etc. to encourage them to do the same - tell our elected officials that the only way to stop the madness is to begin impeachment proceedings against the two main "evil doers" immediately! We don't have a lot of time left before they'll be out of office (and maybe like Rumsfeld, starting a "foundation" of some kind!)

2.) When I receive mail from Democratic candidates asking for money, I write across the pledge card, "When impeachment charges are begun against Bush & Cheney, I will consider supporting the Dems. again.", and I mail it back.
Go to Bill Moyer Journal website, and watch his program from Friday, 7/13/07. He has two guests on, (yes, one is a liberal, but the other is a very stong conservative), and really listen to what they have to say. I think it will convince you that our only hope is impeachment. I really hope you take the time to follow up on this.

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It Figures....
Posted by: dezertlady71 dezertlady71 on Jul 22, 2007 9:58 AM   
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GB has to figure out a way to pay back all of the nations we are indebted/sold out to before he leaves office. Shame on yu Dubya !

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It Figures....
Posted by: dezertlady71 dezertlady71 on Jul 22, 2007 9:59 AM   
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GB has to figure out a way to pay back all of the nations we are indebted/sold out to before he leaves office. Shame on you, Dubya !

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