Taking
Back Iraq's Oil
by Jeff Sowers
Oil may not be the
only reason the U.S. government is rushing into war
with Iraq, but it is certainly one of the main reasons.
Domestic politics, arms industry sales, and other
factors all play a role. But for the money-hungry
oil corporations, like Exxon-Mobile, Shell, and BP,
it is oil that glitters like a mountain of diamonds
in the Iraqi desert.
Crude oil is the world's
most actively traded commodity, and when it comes
to oil, Iraq has lots of it. With proven reserves
of 112-bil bbl (barrels of oil) and probable reserves
of 214-bil bbl, Iraq is second only to Saudi Arabia
in crude oil reserves. Industry experts believe that
Iraq's true resource potential may be far higher,
however, as years of war and sanctions have severely
restricted exploration and development. At current
prices of about $27 a barrel, this comes out to be
a prize worth between $3 trillion and $8.1 trillion.
No wonder a post WWII, U.S. State Department assessment
called the gulf oil resources a stupendous source
of strategic power, and one of the greatest material
prizes in world history ... probably the richest economic
prize in the world in the field of foreign investment.
Buying Security
Council Votes with Oil
The central role that oil is playing in this crisis
was evident in recent U.S. efforts to get the support
of Russia and France, who have been resisting U.S.
pressure to authorize the use of force against Iraq
before inspectors are allowed to return. Their backing
has been crucial because they are among the five Security
Council members with the power to veto a U.N. Security
Council resolution authorizing force.
Why would Russia and
France be so resistant to using force against Saddam
Hussein? It is because both have a large stake in
Iraqi oil and have already invested heavily in it.
On September 1st, the
headline of a Washington Post article read Russian-Iraqi
Oil Ties Worry U.S.: Moscow's Support for an Attack
on Hussein May Depend on Economic Assurances.
The article talked about the depth of
economic ties between Russia and Iraq, which have
been long-time allies, ever since the emergence of
the Bath party and Saddam Hussein in the late
60s. Major Russian oil corporations such as
LUKoil and Zarubezhneft have made major investments
in Iraq and have been seeking to position themselves
as leading exporters of Iraqi oil when economic sanctions
are lifted. LUKoil currently owns 68% in a consortium
that has invested a reported $6 billion in developing
the 20-bill bbl West Kurna oil field; Iraq also owes
Russia at least $7 billion in debt from previous decades.
In a September 9th
New York Times article a senior Bush official said
the arguments presented to the Russians to get their
vote for war against Iraq had been economic,
and that the U.S. did not rule out the possibility
of negotiating explicit guarantees for Russian interests,
mostly oil-related. The official also stated
that they're a lot more likely to get their
debts paid off by supporting the U.S. policy.
France also has major
investments in Iraqi oil. It, more than any other
western nation, has cultivated a relationship with
Iraq. France was the largest supplier of arms to Iraq
during the Iran-Iraq war. In the 1970s they
helped Iraq build a nuclear power plant that was subsequently
bombed by Israel in 1981. The French oil corporation
TotalElfFina, the fifth largest oil corporation in
the world, has a major presence in Iraq. Among other
deals, TotalElfFina has negotiated with Iraq on development
rights for the fabulously rich Majnoon oil field,
the largest in Iraq.
A top French official
candidly laid it out in a September 15th article in
the New York Times. He said, In a sense we're
trapped. Ultimately, we will want to re-engage in
Iraq. We built a strategic relationship there. We
have a market. We want the oil and we want to be in
the game of rebuilding the country. If there were
a new regime and we have not been with the Americans,
where will we be?
Actually, what is probably
worrying the Russians and the French more than what
might happen if they dont go along is what might
happen if they do. Will they get their fair
share of Iraqs oil even if they give their
support, or will they be left to scramble after the
crumbs left behind after U.S. and British oil corporations
are allowed to sweep in and gobble up the juiciest
and most lucrative fields?
Recent statements made
by the U.S.-backed opposition group the Iraqi National
Congress (INC) would certainly give Russia and France
reason to pause. INC officials have made it clear
that they will not be bound by any of the deals
Iraq has made with Russia, France or other nations.
Ahmed Chalabi, the INC leader, went even further,
saying he supports the formation of a U.S.-led consortium
to develop Iraq's oil fields. "American companies
will have a big shot at Iraqi oil," he said.
Exxon and Mobil
Had it First
But how did it come to be that Russia and France got
the dominant position in Iraqi oil, a position they
are now anxious about losing to the British and Americans?
Not so long ago, before the era of Saddam and the
Bath party, it wasnt LUKoil and TotalElfFina
that had the dominant position in Iraqi oil, but Exxon-Mobil,
BP and Shell. From their perspective, regime
change in Iraq would give them the opportunity
to reclaim what was theirs to begin with.
Following the collapse
of the Ottoman Empire after WWI, western governments
and oil corporations descended on the Persian Gulf
like a pack of hungry hyenas, growling and nipping
at each other as they fought for the greatest share.
Britain was the main military power in the region,
and pieced together Iraq from remnants of the Ottoman
Empire. They placed King Faisal, a British puppet,
on the throne, and proceeded to block Exxon and Mobil's
exploration efforts in Iraq while giving full support
to those of British Petroleum and Royal Dutch Shell.
This led to intense diplomatic pressure by the Americans.
A British foreign office official complained that
"Washington officials began to think, talk and
write like Exxon officials. Finally, in 1928,
as part of an overall deal to divide the regions
oil between the worlds great powers, known as
the Red Line Agreement, Exxon and Mobil
were granted a 25% share in the Iraq Petroleum Company.
Production began in 1934. While the oil corporations
were satisfied with the arrangement, many Iraqis
were not. To insure their control, Britain maintained
bases in the area and routinely bombed and strafed
rebellious Kurdish and Shia tribesmen. When the Iraqi
leadership rebelled in 1940, the British were forced
to send in reinforcements leading to armed conflict
with Iraqi forces in 1941. The conflict was short
lived, the rebellious Iraqi leadership fled the country,
and Britain reestablished its authority.
Iraq Slips
Through Britains Fingers
In 1958, the British again lost control when an Iraqi
revolution led by an army faction known as the Free
Officers, under the leadership of Abd al-Karim Qasim,
overthrew and executed the British puppet King Faisal
II. This time, however, reestablishing British control
would not be so easy. The Cold War was in full swing.
Qasim soon established diplomatic relations between
Iraq and Moscow, signed an extensive Iraqi-Soviet
economic agreement, and the Soviets began supplying
arms to Iraq. At the same time, Qasim was cautious
in dealing with the western oil corporations, and
only sought increased revenues rather than complete
nationalization. Qasim also sought to keep his distance
from the Soviets, first embracing and then later repressing
the Iraqi Communist Party (ICP).
Internal division within
the army soon led to Qasims overthrow and a
series of internal coups. In 1968, the Iraqi Bath
party, under the leadership of Ahmad Hasan al Bakr
and Saddam Hussein, emerged as the dominant faction.
Some claim that the CIA played a role in the successful
1968 coup that brought the Bath party to power.
This may well have been, but as events turned out,
it would have been a gamble that didnt pay off.
The Bath turned away from the U.S. and sought
improved relations with the ICP. In April of 1972,
Iraq signed a 15-year treaty of Friendship and Cooperation
with the Soviet Union and agreed to cooperate in political,
economic, and military affairs. The Soviets agreed
to supply Iraq with arms. Bakir also nationalized
Iraqs entire oil industry, including Exxon and
Mobils 25% share in the Iraq Petroleum Company
(a share worth today upwards of a trillion dollars).
The Soviet Union, and later France, among others,
provided Iraq critical technical skill and capitol
needed to exploit the oil fields. And thus it happened
that U.S., British, and Dutch oil corporations lost
their hold on Iraq.
This is not to say
that Iraq became part of the Soviet sphere. While
the Bath turned to the Soviets for protection
from British and U.S. imperialists, they maintained
their independence, and did not allow the soviets
to penetrate their security apparatus to the point
of allowing them to reach the inner leadership.
In the mid-seventies, as had happened in the mid-sixties
under Quasim, when it was felt the communists were
getting too powerful, the Bath cracked down
on the ICP and moved to distance themselves from the
Soviets. During the Cold War period the Iraqi government,
like other revolutionary governments at the time,
was able to find a space to exist independently within
the balance of power between the U.S. and the Soviet
empires.
Strange Bedfellows
Neither should the temporary strategic alliance between
the U.S. and Iraq during the Iran-Iraq war be overstated,
as some progressives have mistakenly done. Iraq under
Saddam was never a client state of the
U.S., though the U.S. did provide crucial military
and political support for Iraq during the latter stages
of the war (a time when Iraq was repeatedly using
chemical weapons against Iran, with U.S. knowledge
and support).
Both Iraq and the U.S.
found themselves in conflict with Iran after the 1979
Islamic revolution that brought Ayatollah Khomeini
to power, but for completely different reasons. The
Ayatollah Khomeini promoted the spread of Islamic
revolution across the Middle East, including revolution
in Iraq to overthrow Saddam and the Bath party,
who were secular nationalists that tended toward authoritarian
socialism. The U.S., on the other hand, had just lost
another oil rich nation to a revolution, and was intent
on not letting the revolutionary fever spread.
The Prize and
the Price
The collapse of the Soviet Union in 1990 and end of
the Cold War radically changed the global power arrangement.
No longer can nations like Iraq play the superpowers
off one another to maintain independence. So after
more than 30 years, with no one to stop them, the
U.S. and Britain, with Exxon-Mobil, BP, Shell, UNOCAL,
and Chevron waiting in the wings, are moving in to
reclaim their lost Iraqi prize. Impotent militarily,
all France and Russia will likely do is sell their
Security Council vote for the highest price they can
get, which probably wont be much.
The highest price of
all, of course, is being paid by Iraqi children, innocent
civilians, and young American troops. It is they,
and not the oil company stockholders, executives,
and political elites who die and suffer as the result
of continued sanctions and the bloody horror that
is war.
Jeff Sowers and his family
recently moved to Urbana from Olympia, Washington
for his wifes graduate work in African Studies.
He is currently working as a substitute public school
teacher. He graduated from the University of Washington
with a degree in Physics in 1988 and then spent six
months living in India, an experience that he says
made the rest of the world much more real and human.
He then came across the work of Noam Chomsky, which
completely transformed his understanding of the world
and the U.S. government. When the first Gulf war took
place in 1991, he became very involved with the anti-war
movement in Seattle. Since then he has been involved
in a variety of issues and projects, including Pastors
for Peace, the Green Party, sweatshop issues, and
the promotion of Direct Democracy. He has also traveled
to Haiti, Cuba, Mexico, and Tanzania. He is currently
a working member at the Common Ground Food co-op and
an active member of AWARE.
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