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How Much Iraqi Crude Oil is Being Stolen? Mystery of the Missing Meters

By Pratap Chatterjee, CorpWatch. Posted April 30, 2007.


Nobody really knows how much crude oil is being stolen by corrupt corrupt Iraqi and U.S. officials because, four years after the invasion, the oil meters haven't been fixed.
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The line of ships at the Al Basra Oil Terminal (ABOT) stretches south to the horizon, patiently waiting in the searing heat of the Northern Arabian Gulf as four giant supertankers load up. Close by, two more tankers fill up at the smaller Khawr Al Amaya Oil Terminal (KAAOT). Guarding both terminals are dozens of heavily-armed U.S. Navy troops and Iraqi Marines who live on the platforms.

These two offshore terminals, a maze of pipes and precarious metal walkways, deliver some 1.6 million barrels of crude oil, at least 85 percent of Iraq's output, to buyers from all over the world. If the southern oil fields are the heart of Iraq's economy, its main arteries are three 40-plus inch pipelines that stretch some 52 miles from Iraq's wells to the ports.

Heavily armed soldiers spend their days at the oil terminals scanning the horizon looking for suicide bombers and stray fishing dhows (boats). Meanwhile, right under their noses, smugglers are suspected to be diverting an estimated billions of dollars worth of crude onto tankers because the oil metering system that is supposed monitor how much crude flows into and out of ABOT and KAAOT -- has not worked since the March 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq.

Officials blame the four-year delay in repairing the relatively simple system on "security problems." Others point to the failed efforts of the two U.S. companies hired to repair the southern oil fields, fix the two terminals, and the meters: Halliburton of Houston, Texas, and Parsons of Pasadena, California.

The Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction (SIGIR) is scheduled to publish a report this spring that is expected criticize the companies' failure to complete the work.

Rumors are rife among suspicious Iraqis about the failure to measure the oil flow. "Iraq is the victim of the biggest robbery of its oil production in modern history," blazed a March 2006 headline in Azzaman, Iraq's most widely read newspaper. A May 2006 study of oil production and export figures by Platt's Oilgram News, an industry magazine, showed that up to $3 billion a year is unaccounted for.

"Iraqi oil is regularly smuggled out of the country in many different ways," an oil merchant in Amman told the Nation (U.S.) magazine last month. "Emir al-Hakim [the head of the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq] is spending all his time in Basra selling oil as if it were his own. People there call him Uday al-Hakim, meaning he is behaving the same way Uday Saddam Hussein was acting. Other merchants like myself have to work through him with the big deals or smuggle small quantities on our own. The petroleum is now divided among political parties in power."

The resource curse

The smuggling and black market operations bear striking parallels to Saddam Hussein's tactics for circumventing the UN embargo. Saddam was accused of selling some $5.7 billion worth of petroleum products on the black market over the six years of the Oil-for-Food program while United Nations inspectors turned a blind eye. Today, his successors stand accused of similar abuses.

Iraq sits on 115 billion barrels of proven oil reserves, the third largest in the world (behind Saudi Arabia and Canada). From a society that once used its oil revenue to create a social welfare state that provided education, health care and social services, the country has plummeted into the ranks of the poorest countries of the world.

Economists call this the "resource curse." Those blessed with non-renewable resources often benefit the least, because a few wealthy people control the resources, or war prevents almost anyone from the benefiting.

Iraq's main revenue source - earnings from the export sales of petroleum, petroleum products and natural gas - is currently managed by the Development Fund for Iraq. DFI's May 21, 2003 document, United Nations Security Council Resolution 1483, assigns this money to benefit the Iraqi people. The resolution replaces the previous United Nations-run Oil-for-Food scheme that lasted from 1997 until the March 2003 invasion.

Almost four years after the DFI was created, officially logged crude sales have generated more than $80 billion. The U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) managed the DFI from the immediate aftermath of Saddam's removal until June 28, 2004, when the CPA was disbanded. During those 14 months, the CPA spent $19.6 billion of Iraq's DFI funds. The three succeeding governments have been officially in charge of the DFI revenues, although the influence of the U.S. military and political advisors has remained significant throughout. In the 32 months after the CPA left, the three governments spent $47 billion more.

Halliburton & Parsons

U.S. contractors have played a key role in the repair and upgrading of Iraq's oil infrastructure and expected the industry to pay for reconstruction. In January 2004, under project Restore Iraqi Oil II (RIO II), the Bush administration contracted with Halliburton to fix southern Iraq's oil fields and with Parsons to handle the northern fields. The two companies were supposed to be supervised by yet another contractor, New Jersey-based Foster Wheeler. (The first RIO contract was the infamous, secret no-bid contract issued to Halliburton before the invasion of Iraq. Although RIO II was competitively bid, Sheryl Tappan, a former Bechtel employee wrote a book criticizing the award as unfair.)

Halliburton and Parsons have long histories in Iraq, going back more than 40 years. Brown & Root, which is now part of Halliburton , began work in Iraq in 1961, while Parsons dipped into Iraq's oil sector in the 1950s. Foster Wheeler dates its work in Iraq to the 1930s.

These companies have a lot of experience at the terminals where the black market now thrives. Indeed, Halliburton built the ABOT terminal, then known as Mina al-Bakr, in the early1970s. After it was damaged during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s, Halliburton repaired the terminal, before it was bombed yet again during the 1991 Persian Gulf War.

The Khor al-Amaya oil terminal also saw a similar cycle of destruction and rebuilding. Built with Halliburton 's help in 1973, it was heavily damaged by Iranian commandos during the Iran-Iraq war, then again during Operation Desert Storm in 1991, and most recently in May 2006 by a major fire that destroyed 70 percent of its facilities. During the sanctions, Ingersoll Dresser Pump Company, a Halliburton subsidiary, had a secret contract to sell Iraq spare parts, compressors, and firefighting equipment for the refurbishment.

( Halliburton also a long history near the Turkish port of Ceyhan, from where Iraq sells oil produced at Kirkuk in northern Iraq. Halliburton runs the nearby U.S. military base at Incirlik, which was the staging ground for Operation Northern Watch that provided air protection for the Kurds during the 1990s.)

Measuring the oil

With billions of dollars to spend and extensive experience with oil infrastructure and Iraqi ports, Haliburton and Parsons seem unable to deal with the routine problem of broken meters at the Southern Iraq terminals.

The kinds of meters they were supposed to repair or replace at ABOT are commonly found at hundreds of similar sites around the world. Because they are custom-built, shipped, then assembled and calibrated on site, the process can take up to a year. But the probelm has persisted for four years.

After the 2003 invasion, the meters appear to have been turned off and there have since been no reliable estimates of how much crude has been shipped from the southern oil fields. (The northern oil fields in Kirkuk, which supply the Beiji refinery in Iraq and export crude to the Turkish port of Adana, has reliable metering but little oil to measure since insurgent attacks largely shut down the facility.)

Lieutenant Aaron Bergman, the U.S. Navy officer in charge of Mobile Security Squadron 7 at ABOT, says export authorities have "guesstimated" how much is being sold, with a back-of-the-envelope formula: Every centimeter a tanker lowers into the water equals 6,000 barrels of oil cargo.

"So you can imagine," he said earlier this month to Stars & Stripes, a newspaper serving the U.S. military, the numbers could be off, "A couple of inches could equal 180,000 barrels of fuel."

"I would say probably between 200,000 and 500,000 barrels a day is probably unaccounted for in Iraq," Mikel Morris, who worked for the Iraq Reconstruction Management Organization (IRMO) at the U.S. embassy in Baghdad, told KTVT, a Texas television station.

Neither US officials nor contractors have provided good reasons why, four years into the US occupation, the meters have not been calibrated, repaired, or replaced. One excuse is that the job of calibration requires special devices to assess the current meters and security issues make importing these devises problematic. Yet that and other security-related explanations fall apart given that the oil terminals are under 24 hour high security guard, lie more than 50 miles off-shore, and are accessible only by helicopter or ship.

There are two possible explanations: that the project has been delayed by bureaucracy or that vested interests benefiting from the lack of oil metering (such as smugglers or corrupt officials) have prevented the project from moving forward.

Skyrocketing Costs

The RIO II project, which includes the meter repair work, has come under much criticism, although specific details are scarce.

For example, the Bush administration issued Halliburton the RIO II order in January 2004 and gave detailed task orders in June. But despite not starting work until November 2004, the company charged the government millions of dollars for engineers who sat idle. Halliburton 's $296 million bill included at least 55 percent overhead. (In an estimate due later this month, SIGIR may predicts even higher overhead costs.)

A Parsons joint venture (with Worley of Australia), was also issued a contract in January 2004, given detailed task orders in June, and started work in July 2004. It has also been accused of charging high overhead costs while idle, although not as much as Halliburton . SIGIR estimate pegs its overhead at 43 percent.

In addition, in a series of scathing internal reports uncovered by Congressman Henry Waxman, supervisors Foster Wheeler criticized Halliburton 's cost. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers issued a "cure" notice on January 29, 2005, ordering Halliburton to do a better job or else. After Halliburton did improve its cost controls, the military turned over the southern oil work to Parsons in mid 2005.

When Parsons took over the contracts, two years after the invasion, it hired a Saudi Arabian sub-contractor, Alaa for Industry, to help repair or replace the meters.

The turbine meters were shipped to Kuwait for repairs but do not appear to have been fixed in a timely manner, although some have been fixed and re-installed earlier this year. Unofficial sources suggest that the Kuwaiti bureaucracy delayed the repair work: "The real reason for the hindrance to work at the ABOT is because Kuwait has a vested interest in minimizing Iraqi oil exports," an anonymous source who worked on the project said. His claim could not be verified.

In mid-September 2006, the Iraqi oil ministry abruptly announced that it would pull the plug on the oil metering project, making future monitoring even less certain.

Asim Jihad, the oil ministry spokesman, told Al Hayat: "The American company had failed in keeping its promise to finish installing these meters; also, refusing to reveal the exact cost, except for saying that it is executing it within the American grant to Iraq and the sum of that grant is unknown to us too. This relieves the ministry from its obligation to it. Besides, many international companies presented good offers to implement the project in a record time due to its importance."

The oil ministry then invited British Petroleum and Shell to plan a comprehensive national metering project that would cover not only the oil terminals, but also the productions wells and the even the refineries.

A SIGIR team traveled to ABOT in November 2006 to check on progress. Its unpublished report suggests that the work was less than half complete.

Suddenly, in December 2006, a high-level U.S. team traveled out to ABOT to inspect the meters. In a little-noticed announcement issued on a Saturday just before Christmas, John Sickman, the resident oil expert at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, said the meters had been fixed and were working fine.

"The measurement using the existing turbine meters and displacement meters at the offshore terminal at ABOT is transparent and the measurement devices are more than adequate," Sickman was quoted in the press release. "Furthermore, the crude oil vessels have measurement and quality samplers."

Indeed this is how the Dutch company Saybolt measured oil export under the United Nations Oil for Food program. The problem even today, according to experts consulted for this report, is that the meters have yet to be calibrated, so the data are basically useless.

Even if the meters are working properly, smuggling could still occur. "It's easy to steal crude if you knew what you were doing," Don Deaver, a petroleum metering expert who worked for Exxon for 33 years, said. "If you meaure too low or too high, someone will lose and some will one gain. It's why you need professionals who understand how the meters work to make sure that nothing is being lost or stolen."

U.S. government officials claim that little is being stolen. SGS (a British consultancy) "is providing independent third party loading certifications onsite for the customers. This, coupled with the recent installation of ultrasonic meter provides more than redundant measurement capability," said Sickman in December.

Days after the press release, in early January 2007, Parsons began work on the meters under a $57.8 million U.S. government-funded contract supervised by Major Dale Winger of the Joint Contracting Command in Basra. Almost as soon as work started, Winger was replaced by Lieutenant Commander Brian Schorn. Reached for this article, Schorn said he was not up to speed on what work had been done, and referred questions to his "front-office" in Baghdad at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Parsons Iraq Joint Venture spokesman Don Lassus also refused to comment. The contract with the military does not permit the release of "any unclassified information," he said, without prior approval of the military.

Today no government officials have been able to establish conclusively whether oil is being smuggled or not. Even the future of the oil metering remains unclear. The latest report issued by SIGIR in January 2007 notes that repair and rehabilitation work at ABOT is scheduled to be finished by May 2007, but "it is unclear whether this project will be completed because of de-obligation requirements" that is to say that the funding could be cut.

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Pratap Chatterjee is managing editor of CorpWatch and the author of 'Iraq Inc.' (Seven Stories Press, September 2004).

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Get those meters turned on, Rah! Rah!
Posted by: Blade on Apr 30, 2007 3:49 AM   
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And after the meters are up an running, calibrated "If you meaure too low or too high, someone will lose and some will one gain. It's why you need professionals who understand how the meters work to make sure that nothing is being lost or stolen.", by the "right" people, I guess the oil gets divvied up properly among the different robber barons? Everybody will get their proper cut?

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Corrupt "Iraqi" officials?
Posted by: xi_people on Apr 30, 2007 4:38 AM   
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Notice how the article blames "corrupt Iraqi officials" in the sub-head. Why not place the onus where it clearly belongs -- on corrupt American Big Oil officials.

Who doubts that any Iraqi, no matter how high up on the totem pole, is receiving much more than chump change as far as the unmetered oil goes.

Interestingly, I read an article yesterday positing that Iraqi oil was being pumped to Saudi Arabia, to be sold as Saudi oil, in order to mask the fact that its oil reserves are in depletion. Who know if that's true, but how can one put anything past the shadowy global elite that are running the show?

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Freedom oil
Posted by: mizipi on Apr 30, 2007 5:35 AM   
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When Saddam ran things, Iraq had hospitals, schools and a welfare program for the poor. These are not what America stands for. We want poor people with no health care. We want substandard education. We want university costs to be so high that only aristocrats can graduate without being in debt. We want people who have billion$ to have trillion$. This is the USA I live in and this is what George Bush and Dick Cheney want for Iraq.

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Impeachment off the table . . . Corruption Never Sleeps
Posted by: shangrilalad on Apr 30, 2007 5:36 AM   
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"Nobody really knows how much crude oil is being stolen by corrupt Iraqi officials."

By golly, we have a few corrupt officials right here in the USA, I'll bet.

Congressional Democrats must know better than most Americans just how lawless and corrupt Republicans have been and continue to be, so what explains their feeble attempts to investigate and prosecute. Every Republican member of congress and Bush’s criminal administration should be investigated, but no more than a half dozen Democrats are conducting hearings, so what the hell are the rest of them doing? Given the magnitude of Republican crimes during the last six years, hundreds of investigation are required. That’s assuming that Republican politicians are actually subject to the law.

Laws are devised not just to punish criminals, but to prevent crime. If Democrats are not willing to expend the effort to prosecute, how about at least trying to prevent future Republican crimes. Is that too much to ask? Maybe that’s too much work to expect from public employees making a measly 186K a year. Not counting bribes.

It goes without saying that few of the crooks will ever be punished, (the plutocrats won’t allow that) but hearings and investigations might at least slow down their ongoing criminal activities.
.

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Sooprize, sooprize!
Posted by: willymack on Apr 30, 2007 7:37 AM   
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Crooks in Iraq stealing oil? Crooks in Washington brutalizing a helpless people so THEY can steal the oil? Perish the thought!

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The Bush-Cheney narrative vs. reality
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Apr 30, 2007 7:57 AM   
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Bush would have you believe that his objective is to create a stable democracy in Iraq, and that the goal of the war was to get rid of Saddam and his chemical, nuclear and biological weapons.

The reality is that Saddam had no nuclear, chemical or biological weapons, and that the goal was to invade Iraq, install a puppet government, and make sure that US-British oil companies got control of Iraq'a 115 billion barrels of proven reserves as well as rights to the unexplored provinces in Western Iraq, which may contain another 100 billion barrels of oil.

Corpwatch has done some of the best reporting on the Iraq oil grab, and this quote from above shows what's really going on: The oil ministry then invited British Petroleum and Shell to plan a comprehensive national metering project that would cover not only the oil terminals, but also the productions wells and the even the refineries.

The oil minister is the key post in Iraq - the current oil minister is Hussain al-Shahristani. Prior to that it was Chalabi, whose INC was Bush's main source of "pre-war intelligence on Iraqi nuclear programs". James Woolsey was Chalabi's contact person (that's the ex-director of the CIA, one of the leaders of the "Committee on the Present Danger" along with George Schultz and Joe Lieberman). See the 2001 UK telegraph article, Building the case against Iraq, Toby Harnden 10-26-2001.

Now, in Iraq today, the pysops general, Petraeus, is continuing this goal: "Working with their Iraqi counterparts, the focus of MNF-I is to help improve the security for the people of Iraq in order to give Iraqi leaders time and space they need to come to grips with tough political issues that must be resolved, Petraeus said."

Let's see what Petraeus really means: he is hoping to suppress any dissent in Iraq so that the puppet government will be able to pass the Iraqi oil law that will hand control of Iraqi oil to BP, Shell, Exxon, Chevron and Halliburton.

This was supposed to already have been accomplished - the BearingPoint (or Chas T. Main) firm that is 'advising' the puppet government had arranged for the auction of Iraqi oil to be held on April 17-18 in Amman Jordan, but had to move the date back to May 28-30 in Dubai, UAE (new home of Halliburton). See the Chevron-sponsored web site at Iraq Oil, Gas, Petrochemical & Electricity Summit 28-30 May 2007, Dubai, UAE

More can be found at Blood and oil: How the West will profit from Iraq's most precious commodity, 07 January 2007, Independent UK.

The story the US press won't cover is this: "Thousands of US soldiers and Iraqi civilians have died so that international oil billionaires can maintain their grip on global oil supplies." Wouldn't that make a good New York Times headline?

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Red Brown and Blue Party comment
Posted by: redbrownandblueparty on Apr 30, 2007 8:40 AM   
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Worrying about meters misses the mountain for a molehill. Oil for money is a mountain of corruption. Oil is a precious resource to serve the earth and her people. Empty hearted patriarchy is an oily, black blooded vampire. Womam [spelling is intentional] Love consciousness is the cure for this black toothed death's head.

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Oh where, oh where has my oil gone?
Posted by: Temporary on Apr 30, 2007 8:45 AM   
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If only hemp were legal and solar, wind, geothermal, hemp, etc ... were funded,
Posted by: maxpayne on Apr 30, 2007 9:33 AM   
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we wouldn't be worrying about those oil meters in Iraq !

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Theft of oil, "misreporting" and the like are just symptoms....
Posted by: Michael Boldin on Apr 30, 2007 9:47 AM   
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of the disease. And that disease is warfare. Whenever a government is allowed the power to be aggressive in such a way, you'll always find massive corruption.

Lies, distortions, theft, "missing" money, countless deaths, and the like..it's the nature of war itself.

It's time for this country to look to the root of the problem - to prevent future politicians from being able to do what bush and his criminal gang have done.

It's national OF-fense which has given these criminals the power to do all this an more, and therefore it's time to start focusing instead on national DE-fense...

For an interesting read:

National Defense vs. National Offense - click here

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"I want my fair share and that’s all of it." - Charles Koch
Posted by: eddie torres on Apr 30, 2007 10:35 AM   
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Oil metering shenanigans are an old trick that even the US Senate has condemned as theft - 18 years ago. From Greg Palast's reporting in the Observer and 'The Best Democracy Money Can Buy' (February, 2002):

"In 1989, the US Senate Special Committee on Investigations reported that 'Koch Oil, a subsidiary of Koch Industries, is the most dramatic example of an oil company stealing by deliberate mismeasurement and fraudulent reporting.' FBI agents had watched Koch Industries trucks taking, but not fully paying for, oil from little gathering tanks on Indian reservations [in Texas and Oklahoma]. An expert for Indian tribes calculates that $1.5 billion of Koch Industries’ wealth comes from pilfered oil. Koch denies all charges...

"...Maybe the top guys at Koch Industries, the billionaire brothers themselves, didn’t know about the skimming game; maybe there was a good explanation. But not according to Roger Williams, an executive in the oil gathering operation.

"...Williams was asked how Charles Koch reacted to a paper that 'showed how much overage they had and how many dollars'. Williams said, of billionaire Koch and another executive with him at the time, 'They would just giggle and nudge each other, you know, it’s kind of a fun time.'

"And that’s where I heard the phrase that well explains the success of some of America’s wealthiest corporate chiefs. Williams was surprised at the billionaire’s concern over these small-change scams, but Williams said Charles Koch told him, 'I want my fair share and that’s all of it.' "

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The question should be -
Posted by: symcokid on Apr 30, 2007 10:46 AM   
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how much crude oil is the United States of America stealing from the people of Iraq. We wouldn't mess with helping ourselves to a little, we'll take it all in front of the entire world, we're the only ones that need oil - screw the rest of the nations!!!

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Let me think about this…
Posted by: HughScott on Apr 30, 2007 11:25 AM   
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President Bush is a former oil man and so is Cheney who created the Pentagon’s single-source no-bid contracts in 1990 before running Halliburton.

Could there be a connection between their backgrounds and the Iraqi crude oil being stolen?

NAH!

Hugh E. Scott, editor of King-George.biz -- the only website with hardcopy proof of White House corruption.

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We need journalism, not pure poppycock
Posted by: Sojourner on Apr 30, 2007 11:36 AM   
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"The problem even today, according to experts consulted for this report, is that the meters have yet to be calibrated, so the data are basically useless.

"Even if the meters are working properly, smuggling could still occur. 'It's easy to steal crude if you knew what you were doing,' Don Deaver, a petroleum metering expert who worked for Exxon for 33 years, said. 'If you meaure too low or too high, someone will lose and some will one gain. It's why you need professionals who understand how the meters work to make sure that nothing is being lost or stolen.'"

Assuming the person quoted in the second paragraph is the one referred to in the first paragraph, the two paragraphs have no logical relationship. Unless the assumption of anonymous "experts" refers to someone we dare not mention, the author presumes a relationship. If the author means the person named, his comment comes from someone whose commercial self-interest is blatantly evident.

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On hindsight is it not a fact that the Iraq war was for STEALING Oil and CRIPPLING her Military?
Posted by: werewolf on Apr 30, 2007 12:19 PM   
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So please DO NOT feign ignorance that America did not mean to STEAL Iraqi Oil when it invaded Iraq under the lie of saving American interests from the threat of Saddam's WMDs. Why be hypocrites? Be honest folks and admit the fact that America invaded Iraq first to STEAL Oil and secondly to cripple Iraqi economic and military infrastucture at the behest of the King makers, Israeli AIPAC lobbyists and the fanatic Christian Right who treat Muslims and Islam as their enemy number one.

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Have fuel prices in Israel dropped?
Posted by: justaguy on Apr 30, 2007 1:28 PM   
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Or are they still high because the Israeli refiners can get a better price by shipping the refined product back to Iraq and the US military there?

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Wow!!! What a fantastic suprise!!!
Posted by: gonzoskismet on Apr 30, 2007 5:02 PM   
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Naw, Cons! This war wasn't about the oil! It was all about
'Fighting terrorism' and 'Weapons on Mass Deception' and 'Bringing Democracy to Iraq'. Right. Bite that line, fish! Meanwhile, George and Dickie dance a gig in the White House everytime the price of gasoline goes up in America! And, dazed and confused, America just keeps on rolling down the freeway of economic desolation. While the Cons in Congress defile anyone who wants to end the occupation of Iraq as 'cowards' 'quitters' and 'surrendering to the enemy' , I ask you in America to look into THEIR records of military service to the USA. Bush had five deferments during Vietnam as did Cheney. These are the COWARDS of America feeding on the PATRIOTS of America and WE HAVE TO LIVE WITH IT? Their sons and daughters, husbands and wifes aren't dying for this
'War on Terra', YOURS are! And this has nothing to do with terrorism unless it is the terror the wealthy in America practice against the poor in America. Look at the poor folks in America that suffer the 'Terrorism' of having their heat or electricity cut off from utility companies that have the legal backing of Congress in their practices! We call this 'free enterprise', we call this 'Capitalism.' But in the end, it's just
'terrorism' under a different mask.
No, America, it's time to realize that the paranoids and the vultures are running America these days and you are the victims of their Dreams of Wealth and Empire. Now, what you are going to do about it is up to you. When the cancer of the daily grind to make them rich eventually eats down to your soul and, miracle of miracles!, you realize how you have been used, will you rise up in anger or sink down into defeat?
The whole world is waiting with baited breath for the answer to that question, America.

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how can you catch the crooks when....
Posted by: eosrk on Apr 30, 2007 6:08 PM   
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....they're being supervised by crooks!

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Army Protecting Private Assests
Posted by: BobbyGreyFriar on Apr 30, 2007 7:23 PM   
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It seems the Army is providing a very costly (for the taxpayer, that is) security operation for the oil companies. Not that the theft would be justified if oil revenues alone were being used, but it does make this crime that much more outrageous.

The euphamisms of economic theorists are rancid,--"the resource curse"--as if this exemplary theft were an act of god. Perhaps is would be more acturate to say that the Iraqi people are victims of the "greed curse". There is an agent at the center of all this after all, his name is Dick.

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» RE: Army Protecting Private Assests Posted by: xconservative
Its the price for saving our asses!
Posted by: Ydotheyhateus on Apr 30, 2007 8:56 PM   
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from the moslem barbarians. Its a crazy situation in Iraq. Bush administration & our brave soldiers are not supermen. So what if some money is being made on the side.
As long as I have freedoms to enjoy the life here in sweet US, and the towel-heads are kept over there, I don't complain!

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» One of the most brainless postings Posted by: Rod from Canada
How much more proof do we need that this is basically a war for oil?
Posted by: yellow on Apr 30, 2007 10:51 PM   
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And the fact that a recent Senate Subcommittee for Permanent Investigations Report of the 109th Congress confirms that high oil prices are being held up by financial speculators adds to this suspicion and in fact confirms the truth of the claim that it is a war for oil.

Ever since 2004, there has been a literal disconnect between global supply and demand. Increased oil stocks correlate with increased prices. The nearly 350 million barrels in reserve currently is the same level as when oil was $15 a barrel in 1996 and yet, despite only negligable increases in daily demand (less than 3 million barrels/day) and high daily production rates we have oil priced at $75 per barrel. Experts estimate that speculation has added over $20 to the price of a barrel of oil for a 40% increase.

It is the increase in speculation, or the long term oil futures positions held by non-commercial traders like investment bankers and hedge funds, which, according to the CFTC has grown since 2001. In 2003, the year of the invasion of Iraq, Commercial users of oil like airlines accounted for about two-thirds of all long term contract futures with speculators holding less than ten percent. By 2006, there was a reversal with about speculators holding the majority of futures contracts about a third of which was held by hedge funds and investment banks. About 65% of all trades was handled by NYMEX but a growing number of trades were handled by ICE in London. This is because of a loophole in a commodity trade bill slipped into the bill in the waning hours of the 106th Congress by ENRON which allowed traders to evade prevailing regulations by simply routing their trades through London even if they originated in the US and even if it was a trade for US oil by US citizens on US soil!!!!!!

Speculators have increased the value of the oil that we are stealing from Iraq to make super profits at the expense of the US consumer and economic recovery. Exxon declared a record $39.5 billion in pure profit for 2006. This is a major disgrace.

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Getting rrrrrrrrrripped off!
Posted by: The Big Raven on May 1, 2007 8:37 AM   
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Its like the high gas prices out west, no one can tell the public WHY? why is the gas prices so high here? My guess its corupt Iraqi officials .

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Oil is a diversion
Posted by: Reader11722 on May 2, 2007 5:18 AM   
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These wars in the Middle East, especially Iraq, are not about oil. We could have bought all the oil for far less money then the cost of the war in money and lives. These battles are about Zionism. Only Israel benefits from these endless Middle East wars. Iraq is the beginning. As we commit war-crimes in Baghdad, the US gov't commits treason at home by opening mail, eliminating habeas corpus, using the judiciary to steal private lands, banning books like "America Deceived" from Amazon and Wikipedia, conducting warrantless wiretaps and engaging in illegal wars on behalf of AIPAC's 'money-men'. Soon, another US false-flag operation will occur (sinking of an Aircraft Carrier by Mossad) and the US will invade Iran.. Then we'll invade Syria, then Saudi Arabia, then Lebanon (again) then ....
Final link (before Google Books bends to gov't demands and censors the title):
America Deceived (book)

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» RE: Oil is a diversion Posted by: yellow
Oil for....?
Posted by: woody26 on May 2, 2007 10:25 AM   
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So now we know how they circumvented getting the oil to Isreal as they orginally planned. Ironic is it not that Isreal is using the oil to control the region as well as protecting the oil lines that run thru the country. Apparently the world is asleep and Isreal is selling dreams to those sleeping....

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slant-drilling
Posted by: KHz on May 2, 2007 2:34 PM   
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I doubt any of the wells that were slant drilling into Iraq oilfields way back when Saddam invaded Kuwaiti back at the start of the 90's ever got shut down either.

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How Much Iraqi Crude Oil is Being Stolen? Mystery of the Missing Meters
Posted by: digression on May 10, 2007 2:19 PM   
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How Much Iraqi Crude Oil is Being Stolen? Mystery of the Missing Meters
Posted by: carboy on May 10, 2007 2:35 PM   
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How Much Iraqi Crude Oil is Being Stolen? Mystery of the Missing Meters
Posted by: afghanistan on May 12, 2007 7:36 AM   
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