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LoungeMachine
08-29-2005, 04:25 PM
IRAQ: Corporate greed drives war and occupation

Rohan Pearce

“War, what is it good for?”, asked Edwin Starr in his 1970 hit single “War”. The answer he gave was “absolutely nothin'!”, a sentiment no doubt shared by most people. But for the owners of the euphemistically named “defence” industry, war — with all its attendant bloodshed and human suffering — is an opportunity to make megabucks. The invasion and occupation of Iraq has not proven an exception.

The lies about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction made by US President George Bush and the neoconservatives who are a driving force in his administration may have died an ugly public death, but the real reasons for the invasion of Iraq still remain obscured in the warmongers' flowery speeches. For example, in an August 20 radio address, Bush said: “We're fighting the terrorists in Afghanistan, Iraq, and around the world, striking them in foreign lands before they can attack us here at home. And we're spreading the hope of freedom across the broader Middle East. By advancing the cause of liberty in a troubled region, we are bringing security to our own citizens and laying the foundations of peace for our children and grandchildren.”

The reality is, of course, that Bush's “war on terror” has nothing to do with fighting terrorism or spreading the “hope of freedom” (much less actually spreading freedom).

“War is merely the continuation of policy by other means”, said the Prussian 19th century general Karl von Clausewitz. In the 20th and 21st centuries this has translated to First World governments using their armed forces to protect the investments of their country's capitalists in Third World countries, and to defend the “right” of their country's corporate elite to exploit the raw materials, markets and labour of the poor countries. The “global war on terror”, charmingly abbreviated as “the GWOT” by the Pentagon, is no different.

From the beginning of the GWOT, Iraq was in the White House's firing line by virtue of its abundant oil resources, which potentially spell a dollar bonanza for US energy corporations, and the strategic role that a pro-US regime in Baghdad could play in cementing Washington's domination of the oil-rich Middle East.

At a White House meeting the day after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, US defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld argued that the US should use the terrorist attacks to justify a war against Iraq, despite there being no connection between 9/11 attacks and Saddam Hussein's regime.

Present at the meeting, along with Bush and then secretary of state Colin Powell, was Richard Clarke, the US National Security Council's counter-terrorism adviser at the time. In his 2004 book Against All Enemies: Inside America's War on Terror, Clarke wrote: “At first I was incredulous that we were talking about something other than getting al Qaeda. I realized with almost a sharp physical pain that Rumsfeld and [then US deputy secretary of defence Paul] Wolfowitz were going to try to take advantage of this national tragedy to promote their agenda about Iraq.”

According to Clarke, Powell argued that Afghanistan had to be the first target of the “war on terror” because “public opinion has to be prepared before a move against Iraq is possible”.

It had long been the view of the neocons that “regime change” in Iraq would help usher in a new era of unrestrained US global power in the post-Soviet era. In January 1998, a letter from the infamous neoconservative think-tank Project for a New American Century to then US president Bill Clinton urged “the removal of Saddam Hussein's regime from power”. Almost as an aside the letter also noted that Iraq possessed a “significant portion of the world's supply of oil”.

The letter's signatories included Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and a range of other neocons who later found jobs in Bush junior's administration, including Richard Armitage, Robert Zoellick and Zalmay Khalilzad (who is now US ambassador to Iraq). So when the neocons took over in Washington after the 2000 presidential election, it was no surprise that “taking out” Saddam Hussein's regime was put on the White House's agenda.

According to the US government's Energy Information Administration, Iraq's proven oil reserves amount to 115 billion barrels and there is a strong possibility of substantially more oil in unexplored areas. In addition, the country has natural gas reserves of at least 3.12 trillion cubic metres. For US oil corporations this represented a massive potential windfall if Saddam Hussein was ousted.

British investigative journalist Greg Palast claimed in March this year that he had uncovered evidence proving that plans for Iraq's oil had already begun to be drawn up shortly after Bush took office in 2001. According to Palast, whose claims were aired on BBC's Newsnight program on March 17, there were disagreements between the neocons and oil company executives about the most desirable way to carve up Iraq's natural resources — the neocons favoured hell-for-leather privatisation while the oil executives favoured the creation of a new Iraqi state-run oil company that would give “favourable” treatment to US corporations. Either way, it would be US corporations that reaped the oil profits from regime change.

That the Pentagon chiefs would sacrifice the lives of tens of thousands of Iraqis and of thousands of US soldiers for the bottom-lines of the corporate rich is nothing new. As US Major-General Smedley Butler pointed out, war is a racket. In his 1935 book of that title, Butler explained: “I spent 33 years and four months in active military service as a member of this country's most agile military force, the Marine Corps... And during that period, I spent most of my time being a high-class muscleman for big business, for Wall Street and for the bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism...

“I helped make Mexico ... safe for American oil interests in 1914. I helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys to collect revenues in. I helped in the raping of half a dozen Central American republics for the benefit of Wall Street. The record of racketeering is long.”

Even the crisis-stricken occupation of Iraq, challenged by a predominantly indigenous resistance movement, is an opportunity for corporate gluttony (a “crisatunity”, as Homer Simpson might put it). The Pentagon continues to rack up huge bills in its struggle to terrorise Iraqi's into submission to Washington's rule and the bulk of this money finds its way back into the bank accounts of US corporations — “corporate welfare” on a mammoth scale.

Linda Bilmes, a former assistant secretary at the US commerce department, argued in an August 20 New York Times op-ed that “if the American military presence in the [Middle East] lasts another five years, the total outlay for the war could stretch to more than $1.3 trillion...

“The cost goes well beyond the more than $250 billion already spent on military operations and reconstruction. Basic running costs of the current conflicts are $6 billion a month — a figure that reflects the Pentagon's unprecedented reliance on expensive private contractors.”

In September 2004, the Washington-based Center for Public Integrity released a study showing that half of the Pentagon's annual budgeted expenditure went directly to private corporations. In the six years leading up to the study, the proportion remained unchanged. But, as the CPI study points out, as the US “defence” budget has grown ever more massive thanks to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, “so have the dollars going to contractors”.

This massive transfer of public wealth to private corporations through war spending is far from unique to the US. In Australia, year after year, the federal and state governments tear public education and health funding to shreds. But the Australian military consistently gets a budget bonanza — in 2005 Australia's “defence” budget was A$17.5 billion. Like the famous graffiti slogan goes, “It will be a great day when our schools get all the money they need, and the army has to hold a cake stall to buy a bomber”.

But it is in the US that the amount of money wasted on the business of war reaches a truly obscene pinnacle. According to an April 27 report released by accountancy group PricewaterhouseCoopers, US military spending reached US$417.4 billion in 2003 — 47% of total world military spending. The report noted that “the US defence budget has increased by 60% in constant US$ over the last ten years”.

As Butler's classic anti-war tract argued: “War is a racket. It always has been. It is possibly the oldest, easily the most profitable, surely the most vicious. It is the only one international in scope. It is the only one in which the profits are reckoned in dollars and the losses in lives...

“How many of these war millionaires shouldered a rifle? How many of them dug a trench? How many of them knew what it meant to go hungry in a rat-infested dug-out? How many of them spent sleepless, frightened nights, ducking shells and shrapnel and machine gun bullets? How many of them parried a bayonet thrust of an enemy? How many of them were wounded or killed in battle?

“Out of war nations acquire additional territory, if they are victorious. They just take it. This newly acquired territory promptly is exploited by the few — the selfsame few who wrung dollars out of blood in the war. The general public shoulders the bill.”

And the bill, wrote Butler, “renders a horrible accounting. Newly placed gravestones. Mangled bodies. Shattered minds. Broken hearts and homes. Economic instability. Depression and all its attendant miseries. Back-breaking taxation for generations and generations.” Any of that sound familiar?


From Green Left Weekly, August 31, 2005.
Visit the Green Left Weekly home page.

LoungeMachine
08-29-2005, 04:27 PM
Seriously.

NATIONALIZE THE OIL INDUSTRY.

Why not?

[ other than it will never happen ]

LoungeMachine
08-29-2005, 06:33 PM
Timeline

Iraq’s Oil Bonanza

Before the Iraq war, Taha Hmud Moussa, then Iraq’s deputy oil minister, told The Guardian that the oil in Iraq “ will exceed 300 billion barrels when all Iraq’s regions are explored,” and some expert estimates come close to that. Iraq may contain a quarter of the world’s oil. Besides quantity, Iraq has quality: Iraqi oil is easy to reach, high-quality sweet light crude, which is cheap to refine, yielding oil companies at current prices a profit margin of 97 percent.

The Wild East and the Next Big Oil Region
An oil field almost the size of the world’s biggest in Saudi Arabia is now being developed in the Caspian Sea, in western Khazakhstan. The Kashagan field is expected to yield its first shipments by 2005. Lack of publicity about the find, located southwest of the city of Atyrau, is due to the Kazakhstan government placing tight restrictions on the consortium that owns the field. British Gas and Shell have 16.67% stakes; other partners include ExxonMobil and TotalFinaElf.

Afghanistan: Pipeline to the Wild East
Much of Afghanistan’s significance in the Caspian region in Central Asia stems from its geographical position as a potential transit route for oil and natural gas exports from Central Asia to the Arabian Sea. In January 1998, an agreement was signed between Pakistan, Turkmenistan, and the Taliban to arrange funding for an 890-mile, $2-billion pipeline project to transport gas from to Pakistan. U.S. oil company Unocal was to finance the bulk of the project, but pulled out of the deal, citing political instability in Afghanistan. In May 2002, Afghan president Hamid Karzai announced that the project is once more alive.

Oil and War Timeline

U.S. Interests in Iraq, Iran, and Central Asia

1951
Mohammad Mossadegh takes power in Iran through an election and says the country will take control of its own oil from the Western companies that control it.

1953
The CIA engineers a coup against Mossadegh—who had threatened Western oil supplies by nationalizing Iran’s oil industry—and installs the Shah of Iran.

1953
The Shah allows foreign oil companies, including American firms, to regain control of Iran’s oil industry.

1972
Iraq angers Western oil interests by nationalizing the oil holdings of the Iraq Petroleum Company, which had been owned by Royal Dutch-Shell, BP, Exxon, Mobil, and the French firm CFP.

1979
The Shah of Iran is toppled by an Islamic revolution and Ayatollah Khomeini takes power, shutting U.S. off from Iranian oil.

September 1980
The eight-year war between Iran and Iraq begins.

December 1983
Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary of Defense, meets with Saddam Hussein in Baghdad, paving the way to the restoration of formal diplomatic relations.

August, 1988
Cease-fire signed between Iran and Iraq.

July 25, 1990
U.S. Ambassador April Glaspie tells Saddam Hussein, in the last diplomatic talk between the two governments, “[W]e have no opinion on the Arab-Arab conflicts, like your border disagreement with Kuwait.”

August 2, 1990
Iraq Invades Kuwait. U.S. intelligence learned of the invasion plans several days in advance, but no deterrence was attempted.

January 12, 1991
Congress grants President George H. W. Bush authority to wage war on Iraq.

January 17, 1991
Gulf War begins with Operation Desert Storm at 3 a.m. Baghdad time.

February 28, 1991
Gulf War Ends.

March 1991
With the loss of Iraqi and Kuwaiti oil supplies after the first Gulf war, Saudi Arabia agrees to increase its oil production by nearly 60 percent.

1993
Dick Cheney negotiates a 900-mile oil pipeline from western Kazakhstan to the Black Sea for Chevron, in a joint venture with the Republic of Kazakhstan.

1995
Chevron names an oil tanker after board of directors member Condoleezza Rice.

February 12, 1998:
Unocal Vice President John J. Maresca testifies before the House that until a friendly government is in place in Afghanistan the trans-Afghani pipeline will not be built.

August 16, 2000
Vice President Dick Cheney retires from Halliburton (an oil field services company where he had served as CEO since 1995) with $1,300,000 in shares and stock options, and deferred compensation payments of more than $160,000 per year through 2005.

August 2002
Administration officials begin feeding the media stories of Iraq’s WMD stockpiles, insisting that Iraq is a threat to the U.S.

January 28, 2003
In a State of the Union address, President Bush announces he is ready to attack Iraq, even without a UN mandate.

March 6, 2003
In a nationwide television address, U.S. president George W. Bush indicates that war is very close.

March 17, 2003
In a nationally broadcasted speech, President Bush announces that Saddam Hussein and his sons must leave Iraq within 48 hours or the war will begin.

March 20, 2003
The Iraq War begins as dawn breaks in Iraq.

March 25, 2003
Halliburton is awarded a contract by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to put out oil fires and make emergency repairs to Iraq’s oil infrastructure.

April–12, 2003
American troops secure the Oil Ministry in Baghdad while allowing the Baghdad National Museum of Antiquities, the seventh largest museum in the world, to be ransacked by looters.

September 2003
After secret negotiations during the week of Hurricane Isabelle, while Washington is shut down, Halliburton is awarded an additional $300 million in no-bid contracts, bringing its total contracts in Iraq to $2.25 billion.

December 2003
Senior defense officials disclose that a Pentagon audit found that Halliburton may have overcharged the Army by $1.09 per gallon for nearly 57 million gallons of gasoline delivered to citizens in Iraq.

This timeline attempts to illustrate the connection between oil and the “ war on terror.” For a more general timeline on Iraq war events, please see the Eyes Wide Open exhibit panels or visit one of the following:

Guardian

Cooperative Research










More Timelines

From the Iraq Peacebuilding Program

Iraq Occupation Timeline April-June 2004

Iraq Occupation Timeline January-March 2004

Iraq Occupation Timeline August-December 2003
Also Available for download as a PDF

Iraq War Timeline 2002-2003
Also available for download as a PDF

Iraq Humanitarian Crisis Timeline 1990-2003

Iraq Timeline 1990-2002

LoungeMachine
08-29-2005, 06:34 PM
Timeline

Iraq’s Oil Bonanza

Before the Iraq war, Taha Hmud Moussa, then Iraq’s deputy oil minister, told The Guardian that the oil in Iraq “ will exceed 300 billion barrels when all Iraq’s regions are explored,” and some expert estimates come close to that. Iraq may contain a quarter of the world’s oil. Besides quantity, Iraq has quality: Iraqi oil is easy to reach, high-quality sweet light crude, which is cheap to refine, yielding oil companies at current prices a profit margin of 97 percent.

The Wild East and the Next Big Oil Region
An oil field almost the size of the world’s biggest in Saudi Arabia is now being developed in the Caspian Sea, in western Khazakhstan. The Kashagan field is expected to yield its first shipments by 2005. Lack of publicity about the find, located southwest of the city of Atyrau, is due to the Kazakhstan government placing tight restrictions on the consortium that owns the field. British Gas and Shell have 16.67% stakes; other partners include ExxonMobil and TotalFinaElf.

Afghanistan: Pipeline to the Wild East
Much of Afghanistan’s significance in the Caspian region in Central Asia stems from its geographical position as a potential transit route for oil and natural gas exports from Central Asia to the Arabian Sea. In January 1998, an agreement was signed between Pakistan, Turkmenistan, and the Taliban to arrange funding for an 890-mile, $2-billion pipeline project to transport gas from to Pakistan. U.S. oil company Unocal was to finance the bulk of the project, but pulled out of the deal, citing political instability in Afghanistan. In May 2002, Afghan president Hamid Karzai announced that the project is once more alive.

Oil and War Timeline

U.S. Interests in Iraq, Iran, and Central Asia

1951
Mohammad Mossadegh takes power in Iran through an election and says the country will take control of its own oil from the Western companies that control it.

1953
The CIA engineers a coup against Mossadegh—who had threatened Western oil supplies by nationalizing Iran’s oil industry—and installs the Shah of Iran.

1953
The Shah allows foreign oil companies, including American firms, to regain control of Iran’s oil industry.

1972
Iraq angers Western oil interests by nationalizing the oil holdings of the Iraq Petroleum Company, which had been owned by Royal Dutch-Shell, BP, Exxon, Mobil, and the French firm CFP.

1979
The Shah of Iran is toppled by an Islamic revolution and Ayatollah Khomeini takes power, shutting U.S. off from Iranian oil.

September 1980
The eight-year war between Iran and Iraq begins.

December 1983
Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary of Defense, meets with Saddam Hussein in Baghdad, paving the way to the restoration of formal diplomatic relations.

August, 1988
Cease-fire signed between Iran and Iraq.

July 25, 1990
U.S. Ambassador April Glaspie tells Saddam Hussein, in the last diplomatic talk between the two governments, “[W]e have no opinion on the Arab-Arab conflicts, like your border disagreement with Kuwait.”

August 2, 1990
Iraq Invades Kuwait. U.S. intelligence learned of the invasion plans several days in advance, but no deterrence was attempted.

January 12, 1991
Congress grants President George H. W. Bush authority to wage war on Iraq.

January 17, 1991
Gulf War begins with Operation Desert Storm at 3 a.m. Baghdad time.

February 28, 1991
Gulf War Ends.

March 1991
With the loss of Iraqi and Kuwaiti oil supplies after the first Gulf war, Saudi Arabia agrees to increase its oil production by nearly 60 percent.

1993
Dick Cheney negotiates a 900-mile oil pipeline from western Kazakhstan to the Black Sea for Chevron, in a joint venture with the Republic of Kazakhstan.

1995
Chevron names an oil tanker after board of directors member Condoleezza Rice.

February 12, 1998:
Unocal Vice President John J. Maresca testifies before the House that until a friendly government is in place in Afghanistan the trans-Afghani pipeline will not be built.

August 16, 2000
Vice President Dick Cheney retires from Halliburton (an oil field services company where he had served as CEO since 1995) with $1,300,000 in shares and stock options, and deferred compensation payments of more than $160,000 per year through 2005.

August 2002
Administration officials begin feeding the media stories of Iraq’s WMD stockpiles, insisting that Iraq is a threat to the U.S.

January 28, 2003
In a State of the Union address, President Bush announces he is ready to attack Iraq, even without a UN mandate.

March 6, 2003
In a nationwide television address, U.S. president George W. Bush indicates that war is very close.

March 17, 2003
In a nationally broadcasted speech, President Bush announces that Saddam Hussein and his sons must leave Iraq within 48 hours or the war will begin.

March 20, 2003
The Iraq War begins as dawn breaks in Iraq.

March 25, 2003
Halliburton is awarded a contract by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to put out oil fires and make emergency repairs to Iraq’s oil infrastructure.

April–12, 2003
American troops secure the Oil Ministry in Baghdad while allowing the Baghdad National Museum of Antiquities, the seventh largest museum in the world, to be ransacked by looters.

September 2003
After secret negotiations during the week of Hurricane Isabelle, while Washington is shut down, Halliburton is awarded an additional $300 million in no-bid contracts, bringing its total contracts in Iraq to $2.25 billion.

December 2003
Senior defense officials disclose that a Pentagon audit found that Halliburton may have overcharged the Army by $1.09 per gallon for nearly 57 million gallons of gasoline delivered to citizens in Iraq.

This timeline attempts to illustrate the connection between oil and the “ war on terror.” For a more general timeline on Iraq war events, please see the Eyes Wide Open exhibit panels or visit one of the following:

Guardian

Cooperative Research

FORD
08-29-2005, 07:34 PM
Originally posted by LoungeMachine


“War, what is it good for?”, asked Edwin Starr in his 1970 hit single “War”. The answer he gave was “absolutely nothin'!”, a sentiment no doubt shared by most people.

Great song. But I prefer the DOA cover version....
http://www.musicobsession.com/Pictures/d/o/doa87527.jpg