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Keeping Iraq's Oil In the Ground

By Greg Palast, AlterNet. Posted June 14, 2006.


Did the U.S. invade Iraq to tap its oil reserves or to make sure they stayed under the sand?
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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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Holy S#it!
Posted by: owlbear1 on Jun 14, 2006 3:18 AM   
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...

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Another piece of the puzzle
Posted by: inanaturallight on Jun 14, 2006 3:59 AM   
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Now the part of the 'Iraqi' constitution (yes, our government says it's an Iraqi constitution written entirely by and for them) that says all new Iraqi oil development will be done by the international oil companies makes even more sense. Apparently my estimations of the extent of price gouging by big oil has been severly underestimated!
A 'side benefit' in the eyes of the powers that be is that keeping it in the ground keeps it out of the hands of the Chinese, another thread that seems to connect the dots of US government behavior with respect to world oil supplies and the countries that generate them.

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That's why Bush supporters are idiots
Posted by: paul_revere on Jun 14, 2006 4:20 AM   
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There have been many anti-war and anti-Bush American patriots who have known all along that the Invasion of Iraq was all about oil and the control of resources, not to mention the establishment of miltary bases that will ensure that control.

The argument about preventing WMD, liberating Iraq from Sadam, and establishing democracy was, and is, pure bulshit. But it is both shameful and disgusting when I hear people on both sides of the political spectrum deny that oil is part of the equation. Oil always has been and always will be a reason for war.

I had heard of this information weeks ago when it broke on the airwaves at KGO AM 810 in San Francisco. Many of us knew that the war was about oil, but it seemed awfully strange that the US wasn't trying to ramp up production of the Iraqi oilfields. Yes, the oilfields were attacked and some were damaged and disabled. But do you think for one minute that if production of oil by Iraq was the goal, that Bush and Cheney and the oil barons would let those oil fields lag so far behind in production? No way. So now it all makes sense, and I thank Mr. Palast for another journalistic revelation to the world.

For those who read this article, don't be naive. It's oil, and American soldiers and inocent Iraqis have died because of it. Bush supporters -- stop waving the flag, take the ribbons off your truck, stop being morons and start marching on Washington. You've been lied to. You've been robbed. Your children, relatives and spouses have died for nothing but the black gold and the money that lines the pockets of the war profiteers

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» RE: That's why Bush supporters are idiots sickofsleaze Posted by: ladybug1@carrollsweb.com
This explains so much.
Posted by: Samantha Vimes on Jun 14, 2006 4:29 AM   
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Good article.

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Iraq war
Posted by: rsaxto on Jun 14, 2006 4:57 AM   
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The Iraq war is about who controls the oil supply and especially it is about who gets most of the profits from from the control of oil production. USA soldiers are dying and being grossly injured so that a tiny group of the rich can grab the highest amount of profit out of pumping (or not) the oil out of the ground. It is classic greed writ as large as possible. Death to the Iraqis and to many American soldiers/marines to feed to the max the incredibly sick greed of a few oil barons. It is capitalism controlled by war criminals and financial criminals. It is the finger of greed up democracy's ass.

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» RE: Iraq war Posted by: feller
» RE: Iraq war Posted by: bg41
» RE: Iraq war Posted by: rrecroc
dw13
Posted by: daw13 on Jun 14, 2006 6:18 AM   
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As the peak oil crisis worsens during the coming decades, who controls access to the undrilled Iraqi oil will be in the driver's seat.

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» RE: dw13 Posted by: rwa
Of course Palast is totally right again
Posted by: janvdb on Jun 14, 2006 6:23 AM   
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Yes, the idea is to push up the price of oil.

The really nice thing about using war and civil unrest to suppress production and push up price is the total uncertainty of it prevents alternatives from developing -- who can say when the a-holes in charge of the war will knock it off, let the price of oil fall and wipe out all the little start-up wind and solar alternatives who had become economically viable due to the higher oil price.

Sabotage, capped production -- high oil price, high oil company profits.

And, to boot, billions to pour down the gullet of Halliburton and too much uncertainty about the outlook to allow for healthy investment in alternative fuels.

He needs impeached for about ten different reasons, and every one of them more important than the trumped-up media circus that hounded Clinton.

Jan VanDenBerg

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t2junior67
Posted by: benu67 on Jun 14, 2006 7:06 AM   
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thank you mr. Palast, again. here we are talking about how chimpy invaded Iraq for it's oil. it never occured to me that they wanted to keep it under the sand. it makes so much more sense now, with the rising oil prices on the market. the more i read about big oil and this administration, the more i throw up. the public really needs to wake up from their "me" coccon. God help us all.

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» RE: t2junior67 sickofsleaze Posted by: ladybug1@carrollsweb.com
The UN connection
Posted by: chica on Jun 14, 2006 7:42 AM   
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Another excellent article from Palast. The complicity of the UN poses some interesting questions.

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Did I have it wrong
Posted by: solrev on Jun 14, 2006 8:08 AM   
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I believed that the terrorists and patriots fighting the US invasion in Iraq threw a monkey wrench into the Cheney plan to control the oil fields. If the goal is to limit oil production, they are probably doing Cheney a favor or at least giving him an excuse to limit production. I think Bush’s rush to Iraq was to explain to the new government that some troop reductions would occur by August. Bush is not cutting and running but he does need some political juice for November and he needs to pacify some Americans. He needs the new government to put a leash on their militias to hold down publicity. This reduction is going to make the Iraqi patriots happy. This will also make the new government leaders aware of the fact, that the only way they can escape the assassination block is to end the US occupation all together. Who will control the oil production in Iraq then? If the new government in need of cash to survive does not adhere to OPEC quotas, who will invade Iraq next? A Middle East Shia – Sunni conflict would give the terrorists exactly what they want. The opportunity to attack oil production, every where in the Middle East and create a worldwide depression. Where are those free market bozos when you need them?

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» RE: Did I have it wrong Posted by: Iconoclast421
» RE: Did I have it wrong Posted by: solrev
» RE: Did I have it wrong Posted by: brunowe
» RE: Did I have it wrong Posted by: LeonDion
One thing's for sure...
Posted by: Mutternich on Jun 14, 2006 8:47 AM   
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...Whether the oil under the ground is running short or still plentiful, it's better to have it there than in our air. We've gotta break our dependence on it.

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» RE: One thing's for sure...sickofsleaze Posted by: ladybug1@carrollsweb.com
Palast Is Dead On
Posted by: DennisDalrymple on Jun 14, 2006 8:50 AM   
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When one stops to consider that the Bush-Cheney Junta have issues with three out of the four top oil producers in the world (Iraq, Iran and Venzuela), thus driving up the price of oil and most of the rest of the energy upon which we depend, one can only conclude that Greg Palast is correct: It is and has been official U.S. policy to suppress oil production to enrich oil companies. This is also the Enron model used to
drive up the price of electricity in California a few years ago, and we know where that led Kenny-boy.

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» The Godfather Saga Posted by: feller
Do you remember when?
Posted by: Sojourner on Jun 14, 2006 9:27 AM   
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Over the last half century, back to when gasoline was .13/gal, there were many suggestions that gasoline be taxed in order to provide funding for a variety of transportation improvements.

The response always was, Americans would never allow it. Americans cannot afford to pay more for gasoline.

As it now turns out, what was really at stake is that oil barons did not want any of the profit to go to public programs or programs in the national interest.

Americans are more than willing to pay over $3/gal for gasoline, thereby allowing the oil barons to continue to suck up record earnings and profits.

Somehow I suspect that they realize that sooner or later energy resources will be nationalized--it only makes sense. We regulate rivers and coastlines and the quality of our air. But we do not regulate gasoline production? OK; we do. But not to the extent that is in the public and national interest.

The oil barons know that sooner or later we will see that. So all their effort goes to making it later rather than sooner.

Gotta hand it to them. They know how wup us slaves and keep us giving them our money.

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» RE: Do you remember when? Posted by: Mutternich
» RE: Chavez Posted by: rwa
Palast is wrong
Posted by: baugh on Jun 14, 2006 11:08 AM   
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It's a good conspiracy theory but it contradicts some other info I've seen.

First, reserves may be up on paper, but part of that comes from unverified increases in OPEC numbers over the past few decades. Second, the discovery of new reserves is not keeping pace with consumption of the old ones. We use something like three barrels of oil for every new barrel discovered. At least one of the big oil companies has admitted as much in public statements.

Add it up and oil production will peak before mid-century (around 2040 according to National Geographic). But -- and this is the part that's important to this discussion -- non-OPEC oil will start to decline by 2016. That means a decade from now OPEC will be in the driver's seat.

So I think a more likely explanation for the invasion was to castrate OPEC. Get Iraq out of the cartel and be in a position to influence how and when its reserves are used. This is the position Paul Robert's took in The End of Oil -- a good read.

We'll never know exactly what great strategic thinking was behind the invasion, but I agree with Greg Palast at least that the oil companies were consulted in the matter and OPEC wasn't supposed to benefit from it.

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» RE: Palast is wrong? Posted by: boblippold
Bush Adminstration
Posted by: bergiecc007 on Jun 14, 2006 12:31 PM   
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This just adds more and more evidence that we went to war in Iraq for the wrong reasons. It now is very clear that we hurt Saddam Hussien in the Gulf War but did not hurt him enough to completley control his exportation of Oil and this is also becoming quite clear why the insurgency might actually be a good thing for the big oil companies. This is sick and inhumane and sadly this is how the corporate world operates and there is absolutley no respect for actual human life.

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US econ
Posted by: solrev on Jun 14, 2006 1:10 PM   
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Greenspan seemed afraid of what high gas prices and the potential for disruption of oil production in the Middle East would do to our economy. When he testified last week.

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» RE: US econ Posted by: feller
» RE: US econ Posted by: billfaster
Possible Backfire
Posted by: braxxian on Jun 14, 2006 4:28 PM   
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A very interesting article indeed, however one thing strikes me as a little odd. Already the world is screaming about the price of oil and the US president has stated publicly that oil in not the future for America. Indeed the high price of oil has begun to speed up the search for fuel alternatives like never before.

Its true that oil will be with us for many years to come however the massive movement to move away from oil has already begun and will only increase in the next ten years. So things could well backfire on the oil barons if they decide to lock up Iraq’s reserves for to long. The world has already seen that oil is becoming a thing of the past and while it will takes several decades to move to a alternate power oil will in time become worthless.

I'm sure the greedy black hearted bastards are aware of his however, it will be interesting to see how things develop over the next few years.

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When will the spineless Democrats start talking about this?
Posted by: yurbud on Jun 14, 2006 8:43 PM   
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As long as the Democrats don't talk about the oil motive for the Iraq War and all the machinations that have gone on after, I can can only assume one of a couple of options are true:

1. They are too afraid of the oil industry to speak.

2. They hope to get donations from the oil industry after the GOP implodes.

3. They agreed with some variation of the oil motive for the war.

As a corollary, I can't believe the Democrats are serious in discussing a pullout from Iraq since they haven't put ALL the cards on the table.

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for the baloney of the world palast is correct in his investigation
Posted by: saywhat? on Jun 14, 2006 10:44 PM   
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what boils me is what people are willing to swallow...open your eyes people !!!!!!...amidt what your intentions are.!!!!!.....how do you exploit nature????hopefully you aren't the ones who don' t care about the polar bears???..it can't be that bad really? come on.....


otherwise we can be the kind of fascists that will go along with the interrogator who asks: why do you have sunglasses on?....now come on, all we souls , respect that sunglasses are on for a reason, -----however, -----because someone is blind is NOT a reason to provoke someone into your thinkng....how much eaves dropping are you willing to put up with?

geeze....listen....learn.....

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I'm not buying this argument
Posted by: xi_people on Jun 15, 2006 3:32 AM   
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I love Palast's coverage of the stolen elections, but he's just plain wrong on this one. If the main thrust of his argument is that Iraq was invaded to keep the oil in the ground, then why the urgency? Why the rush? Saddam wasn't going to suddenly start upgrading his oil infrastructure, so most Iraqi oil would have remained underground anyway. He didn't have the means to maintain the drilling infrastructure to become a rival to Saudi Arabia. So, the situation could have been maintained for the next decade or so.

Everything about this entire operation: the stolen election of 2000 and the invasion were forced, rushed. A lot of people in the ruling elite were extremely anxious for this ill-conceived plan to go forward. It is now obvious that the entire invasion was done "on the fly" with no real plans for the aftermath, except to build permanent bases. The ruling class, with virtually unlimited resources, could have done a much better job of the whole thing, and they would have if this wasn't a rushed decision. Keeping the oil in the ground would NOT have caused them to rush.

Another point is that the oil reserve numbers that Palast quotes for Iraq are deceiving. Its impossible to say how much oil lies beneath a given area of land, and until the reported reserves become "proven" reserves, its all speculation. In addition, oil fields can never be milked down to the last drop. An estimated 50% of the oil in any given oil field simply cannot be extracted.

The real reason for the invasion was to preseve the petrodollar. Saddam had started to sell his oil in Euros and was profiting greatly for doing so. Once more OPEC countries started to do the same, it would have brought the primacy of the dollar to a catastrophic end. Once the dollar is no longer th only reserve currency used in oil transactions, it will lose up to 50% of its value. That's why Iraq was attacked, and that's why all the saber-rattling is going on around Iran - who is now setting up its own oil bourse to sell oil in Euros.

That's what this whole thing is about. Once the dollar is no longer the reserve currency for the world, it will be dumped en mass, which would spell the end for the US as a superpower. Unfortunately, the move to war only temporarily forestalled this from happening, as Russia is now sellng oil in Rubles and Iran's oil bourse is due to come online very soon.

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» RE: Have you forgotten PNAC? Posted by: Maryanne
Sources anyone?
Posted by: cheffern on Jun 15, 2006 8:52 AM   
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While I have not trouble believing that what Mr. Pelast writes is in fact the truth, I am not ready to accept it until I see some convincing sources. What is his proof that this "red line" meeting occurred? This is the first I have heard about this, maybe someone else knows more about this and can enlighten me.
Sorry, I am not ready to accept something until I know it's fact and not just conjecture.

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mdruss42
Posted by: mdruss42 on Jun 15, 2006 11:07 AM   
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RE..GREG PALAST´S KEEPING IRAQUE´S OIL IN THE GROUND, AND VARIOUS COMMENTS... While I do not doubt for one minute that Mr. Palast has presented a true picture of one detail of history and his stated reasons for what has taken place since the present gang took the leadership of our country, we can get overwhelmed by detailed minutiae of the procedure of carrying out plans and programs...The Dulles boys and their cronies planned how the US corporation was to control the raw materials of the world, then Cheney, Rumsfield, Wolfowitz, Jeb,the literate,Bush, and their cronies reinvented the wheel with their plan for a new century of overt control....and forget what is really important......THE PLAN.
Keeping in mind that the Dulles, Cheneys and Rumsfields of this world are sociopathic and convinced that they have the only truth.....Yes, I believe they believe what they do is right,not in any moral sense because morality plays no part in their thinking, and any futherance of their plan is justified. This does not say that they and their plan are not evil, like the incarnation of evil in our myths.....and are willing to destroy anything or anyone, indeed, whole populations of anyones, to futher their aims, so comparisons with Hitler, Genghis Khan, Tammerlane, or Alexander, while correct, serve no purpose, as most US citizens under the age of 40 do not know what you are talking about. To concern yourself with who betrayed who, when collabarations took place among the various players, etc, etc, is to get bogged down with looking at someone´s crotch, or discussing how many angels can dance on the head of a pin.
As for waiting for the Democrats to seriously address the problems we seem to have wrought for ourselves, we must remember, they have been purchased by the same corporate structure that owns the Republicans. Clinton was every bit as destructive as this administration, just not as objectionable a personality as the present Spokesperson.
If you want proof of what the writer says, look up his footnotes or history line.
FORESTS AND TREES FOLKS.........

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» RE: mdruss42 Posted by: bgiltner
Fascinating piece
Posted by: Rod from Canada on Jun 15, 2006 3:08 PM   
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But the article and the comments almost raise more questions than they answer. Was Iraq invaded to exploit the oil or to keep it off the market? Is peak oil a myth or not? Was the invasion really about the dollar as opposed to oil? Whatever, I think it is safe to say that this piece will definitely not make it into the mainstream media.

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» RE: Fascinating piece Posted by: Scaala
Peak oil is the 6th time this myth has been pulled on us
Posted by: rwa on Jun 15, 2006 4:31 PM   
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Is it a coincidence that chief Peak Oil proponent/point-man, Matthew Simmons is a member of the Council On Foreign Relations [CFR]? Is it also a coincidence that the mantra of the CFR has long been One-World Government?

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Geology and politics united
Posted by: Canute on Jun 15, 2006 7:04 PM   
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The last time the earth was making any oil was the late Miocene, about 12 million years ago. It won't be making any more any time soon. We can argue about the timing of the oil peak, but there's only so much oil in the ground - a decline is inevitable. You can be wrong about predicting when the sun sets a bunch of times, but eventually it will. The most optimistic analysts (the EIA) say around 2037. Even if these optimists are right, we don't have enough time to make a passable societal/technological conversion.

The game is about testing the price elasticity of oil, that is, how much of a price rise it takes to lower consumption. If you are an oil company or crony thereof, you want to increase the price for max profit, but not so much that people start conserving. Then, of course, you want a barrel or two of oil in your pocket for when the price really jumps, post peak.

The Bush admin had multiple motives for invading Iraq: higher reelection chances for a war president, enriching military contractors, non-Saudi locations for bases in the Middle East oil patch, suppressing Iraqi oil production, controlling Iraqi oil fields for future use (both economically and as a bargaining chip with China and India), and plain old imperial hubris. It's never simple.

An engineer friend once said to me, "If a piece of technology is only doing one thing for you, it's not working hard enough." Same goes for an invasion.

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Peak oil 2150
Posted by: rwa on Jun 15, 2006 8:49 PM   
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BBC reports
Analysis by the US Department of Energy (DoE) - seen by Newsnight - shows that at $50 a barrel Venezuela - not Saudi Arabia - will have the biggest oil reserves in Opec.

Venezuela has vast deposits of extra-heavy oil in the Orinoco. Traditionally these have not been counted because at $20 a barrel they were too expensive to exploit - but at $50 a barrel melting them into liquid petroleum becomes extremely profitable.

The DoE report shows that at today's prices Venezuela's oil reserves are bigger than those of the entire Middle East - including Saudi Arabia, the Gulf states, Iran and Iraq.

In the future Venezuela won't have any more oil - but that's in the 22nd Century

Hugo Chavez
The US agency also identifies Canada as another future oil superpower.

Venezuela's deposits alone could extend the oil age for another 100 years.

The DoE estimates that the Venezuelan government controls 1.3 trillion barrels of oil - more than the entire declared oil reserves of the rest of the planet.

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Not so fast, skeptics...
Posted by: feralmet on Jun 16, 2006 5:41 AM   
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I always read Greg avidly and hang on to every word, but I'm having trouble with his gleeful outlook for Venezuela's sea of mud. To be sure, it has considerable commercial value at long last.

Oils ain't oils. The poorer the oil, the less contained energy and the more dross. Tar sand is an extreme example.

As oil quality drops, the MORE the energy which must be sacrificed to yield ever LESS contained energy - and the LARGER must be the processing plant for a steady output.

We have plundered the best and easiest of oils first (of course) and our economy is based on this "cheap" energy source. Something has to change, no matter what.

I prefer the term "Peak Gasoline and Diesel" to Peak Oil, as I think it better describes the physical problem.

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What about Israel?
Posted by: aarons1917 on Jun 16, 2006 2:31 PM   
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While the control of oil for whatever reason is certainly one of the reasons for the invasion of Iraq, another reason is the Zionists' desire to destroy the main Arab threat to Israel's domination of the region.

The neocons, after all, are mostly connected to and ardent supporters of the most aggressive and racist forces inside the Israeli establishment. But even before the advent of the neocons, the Israel lobby was a major force pushing for both the 1991 attack on Iraq and the "sanctions", i.e., blocade, that killed well over a million Iraqis, at least half of them children.

Palast himself is an ardent Zionist who never has anything good to say about the Palestinians and whose anti-Arab bias is apparent in most of what he writes about Iraq. So it's not surprising that he doesn't mention the Israel factor. But what about the rest of you?

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» RE: What about Israel? Posted by: yellow
Pallast is right about oil but avoided Israel
Posted by: rwa on Jun 16, 2006 7:37 PM   
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While depriving the world of oil does serve the interests of capital at the expense of the poor there is a reason that Iraq and Iran are the attacked. That reason would be zionism. Creating chaos and destruction among Israel's enemies is the primary concern of the neocons. Manipulation of markets and corruption can be achieved with far less risk, these were secondary.

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Middle Eastern Conflicts and Price of Oil
Posted by: herbivore on Jun 17, 2006 5:37 AM   
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Jonathan Nitzan and Shimshon Bichler have been saying something quite similar for the last few years. They have found a long term correlation between the price of oil, oil company profits, and Middle Eastern conflicts. Whenever oil company profits dive dangerously low and the price of oil has bottomed out (much like around 1999) there is another build up of conflicts in the Middle East.

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The war on Palestine is non-stop
Posted by: rwa on Jun 17, 2006 7:32 AM   
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U.S. foriegn policy in the near east is not governed by oil interests. This can be seen by the sacrifice of good relations with oil producing nations. Imagine the status that the U.S. could have established if it weren't obsessed with forcing the region to accept the presence of an expanding racist aggressor.

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Iraq as the last of the swing producers?
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Jun 17, 2006 9:43 PM   
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It's worth looking at the EIA chart,

Iraq's Oil Production and Consumption 1980-2005,

and notice that every time Iraq starts to ramp up oil production they get bombed and invaded. Coincidence? - unlikely. Related? - very probable. One thing seems clear - the US government doesn't like the idea of an Arabian or Persian or African version of China or India, but the fact is that this seems inevitable within the scope of history. There seems to be something of the Tonya Harding approach to economic competetion in play here.

The peak oil notion is supported by the big oil mergers - the theory being that it became easier to find oil reserves on another companies books then it was in the ground. Also, Shell just had to restate its 'Booked reserves' by 20%. Companies and countries are more likely to overstate then to understate their real reserves, apparently. Peak oil is a physical reality - but we might be sitting at the peak for a decade before we are actually sure of it, so don't hold your breath waiting for the big bang.

As far as gas prices go what peak oil means is that oil companies can now drive prices up by restricting their output - in the past, this would just diminish their sales as competitors rushed to pick up the slack, but if supplies are tight then prices climb. This is further evidence that supply limitations, i.e. peak oil conditions, are also present. Would oil companies manipulate peak oil conditions to boost profits? I'd guess yes. Would they rather be pumping oil out of a pacified Saudi Arabia-ized Iraq? Probably yes.
Gulbenkian did say, "I'd rather have a smaller piece of a bigger pie."

However, these high prices have swelled the coffers of many oil-rich nations - Chavez is swimming in money, he's giving cheap oil to the US urban poor, making US oil companies look really bad (which is why he's doing it, they claim). Russia is emphasizing it's control of Europe's gas supply, in Bolivia Morales went and nationalized the fossil fuel reserves, and Nigerian villagers are showing savy political skills as well. China is building its own strategic reserve stockpile is very actively seeking deals - and so are all the oil companies.

Back to 2000: Saddam moves all his central bank dollar holdings into euros, which means an 80% loss - then the euro goes up against the dollar, and the result is something like 120% gain. Saddam was using his oil wealth to launch an assault on the US dollar, and his oil wealth was poised to expand once again. Saddam has also gone and donned the mantle of Arab nationalism, imagining himself as the new Nasser-Messiah. This is not part of the PNAC playbook.

If this 'dollar hegemony' plays as big a role as some believe, then it's worth noting that the finance sector has given more money to Bush then the oil sector, according to opensecrets.org. Then Saddam's switch to the euro becomes a reason to invade him, on top of his oil - So another war is drummed up, with control of the oilfields being the long-term prize.

Meanwhile, oil supplies are tight - but Iraq could change that for a number of years, and so over the next decade, whoever controls Iraq - Controls The World! HaHaHaHa! Another martini! Who says the parties over?

The neocon argument was that Saddam was a madman, and as he gains money and power he would become the new Hitler of the Middle East; beyond that their arguments get very blurry: Islamofascist-clash of civilizations-military commitments, etc. Why can't they just say, "Controlling Iraqi oil is one of the strategic imperatives for the continuing global dominance of the US."?

See Rob Newman's History of Oil for a humorous take on this topic.

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Oil mergers and stock buy backs increase profits by limiting supply
Posted by: rwa on Jun 18, 2006 8:08 AM   
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Oil exploration increases supply to the point of reducing prices to the cost of production. This cycle has occured six times so far. No wonder big oil won't invest in exploration and development. They simply let the upstarts invest til the market is glutted, wait for prices to crash and pick up the pieces at a bargain.
Current oil supplies already exceed demand. Prices remain high due to concerns about the U.S. disrupting supply from the Persian gulf. With the coming global growth slowdown prices will crash. At that point the majors will replace thier reserves at the expense of small investors.
Iraq's oil sales represent a tiny tiny fraction of foriegn exchange and in no way harmed the value of the dollar while they were traded in Euros. Ditto with Irans oil bourse. The U.S. current account deficit exceeds $800 billion annually, Iran's oil sales $16 billion.

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Make up your mind, Palast
Posted by: Don H on Jul 4, 2006 8:08 PM   
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Did we go to war in Iraq FOR oil, or to suppress it?

On March 17, 2005 you wrote:

"The industry-favoured plan was pushed aside by a secret plan, drafted just before the invasion in 2003, which called for the sell-off of all of Iraq's oil fields. The new plan was crafted by neo-conservatives intent on using Iraq's oil to destroy the Opec cartel through massive increases in production above Opec quotas."

linked text


You can't have it both ways.

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Bil
Posted by: Bil on Dec 31, 2006 9:46 PM   
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new1
new2
new3
new4

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