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The Iraqi Oil Ministry's New Fave Five
All the Oil News That's Fit to Print (Attn: The New York Times)
by Nick Turse On June 19th, the New York Times broke the story in an article headlined "Deals with Iraq Are Set to Bring Oil Giants Back: Rare No-Bid Contracts, A Foothold for Western Companies Seeking Future Rewards." Finally, after a long five years-plus, there was proof that the occupation of Iraq really did have something or other to do with oil.
Quoting unnamed Iraqi Oil Ministry bureaucrats, oil company officials, and an anonymous American diplomat, Andrew Kramer of the Times wrote: "Exxon Mobil, Shell, Total and BP along with Chevron and a number of smaller oil companies, are in talks with Iraq's Oil Ministry for no-bid contracts to service Iraq's largest fields."
The news caused a minor stir, as other newspapers picked up and advanced the story and the mainstream media, only a few years late, began to seriously consider the significance of oil to the occupation of Iraq.
Tomgram: Nick Turse, The Bush Administration Strikes Oil in Iraq
and
speaking of oil, just when we were barely getting used to Big Oil and
Iraq hitting the front pages of American newspapers in tandem, here
comes Afghanistan! Who now remembers that delegation of Taliban
officials, shepherded by Unocal ("We're an oil and gas company. We go
where the oil and gas is "), back in 1999, that made an all-expenses
paid visit to the U.S. There was even that side trip to Mt. Rushmore,
while the company (with U.S. encouragement) was negotiating a $1.9
billion pipeline that would bring Central Asian oil and natural gas
through Afghanistan to Pakistan? Oh, and who was a special consultant
to Unocal on the prospective deal? Zalmay Khalilzad, our present neocon
ambassador to the U.N., George W. Bush's former viceroy of Kabul and
then Baghdad, and a rumored future "Afghan" presidential candidate.
Those
pipeline negotiations only broke down definitively in August 2001, one
month before, well, you know and, as Toronto's Globe and Mail
columnist Lawrence Martin put it, "Washington was furious, leading to
speculation it might take out the Taliban. After 9/11, the Taliban,
with good reason, were removed -- and pipeline planning continued with
the Karzai government. U.S. forces installed bases near Kandahar, where
the pipeline was to run. A key motivation for the pipeline was to block
a competing bid involving Iran, a charter member of the 'axis of
evil.'"
Well, speak of the dead and not-quite-buried. It turns
out that, in April, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India
(acronymically TAPI) signed a Gas Pipeline Framework Agreement to build
a U.S.-backed $7.6 billion pipeline. It would, of course, bypass Iran
and new energy giant Russia, carrying Turkmeni natural gas and oil to
Pakistan and India. Construction would, theoretically, begin in 2010.
Put the emphasis on "theoretically," because the pipeline is, once
again, to run straight through Kandahar and so directly into the
heartland of the Taliban insurgency.
Pepe Escobar of Asia
Times caught the spirit of the moment perfectly: "The government of
Afghan President Hamid Karzai, which cannot even provide security for a
few streets in central Kabul, has engaged in Hollywood-style suspension
of disbelief by assuring unsuspecting customers it will not only get
rid of millions of land mines blocking TAPI's route, it will get rid of
the Taliban themselves." Nonetheless, as in Iraq, American (and NATO)
troops could one day be directly protecting (and dying for) the
investments of Big Oil in a new version of the old imperial "Great
Game" with a special modern emphasis on pipeline politics.
There
has been a flurry of reportage on the revived pipeline plan in Canada,
where -- bizarrely enough -- journalists and columnists actually worry
about such ephemeral possibilities as Canadian troops spending the next
half century protecting Turkmeni energy. If you happen to live in the
U.S., though, you would really have no way of knowing about such
developments, no less their backstory, unless you were wandering the
foreign press online.
Nick Turse, author of the indispensable
new book, The Complex: How the Military Invades Our Everyday Lives,
considers the Iraq oil story that did, at last, hit the mainstream news
here (only a few years late in the Great Game) and offers suggestions
for mainstream reporters now ready to pursue the story wherever it
leads, even back into an ignored, and oily, past.
- Tom
The Iraqi Oil Ministry's New Fave Five
All the Oil News That's Fit to Print
(Attn: The New York Times)
by Nick Turse
On
June 19th, the New York Times broke the story in an article headlined
"Deals with Iraq Are Set to Bring Oil Giants Back: Rare No-Bid
Contracts, A Foothold for Western Companies Seeking Future Rewards."
Finally, after a long five years-plus, there was proof that the
occupation of Iraq really did have something or other to do with oil.
Quoting unnamed Iraqi Oil Ministry bureaucrats, oil company officials,
and an anonymous American diplomat, Andrew Kramer of the Times wrote:
"Exxon Mobil, Shell, Total and BP along with Chevron and a number of
smaller oil companies, are in talks with Iraq's Oil Ministry for no-bid
contracts to service Iraq's largest fields."
The news caused a
minor stir, as other newspapers picked up and advanced the story and
the mainstream media, only a few years late, began to seriously
consider the significance of oil to the occupation of Iraq.
As
always happens when, for whatever reason, you come late to a major
story and find yourself playing catch-up on the run, there are a few
corrections and blind spots in the current coverage that might be worth
addressing before another five years pass. In the spirit of
collegiality, I offer the following leads for the mainstream media to
consider as they change gears from no-comment to hot-pursuit when it
comes to the story of Iraq's most sought after commodity. I'm talking,
of course, about that "sea of oil" on which, as Deputy Secretary of
Defense Paul Wolfowitz pointed out way back in May 2003, the month
after Baghdad fell, Iraq "floats."
All the News That's Fit to Print Department
In
a June 30th follow-up piece, the Times's Kramer cited U.S. officials
(again unnamed) as acknowledging the following: "A group of American
advisers led by a small State Department team played an integral part
in drawing up contracts between the Iraqi government and five major
Western oil companies "
In addition, he asserted, this
"disclosure is the first confirmation of direct involvement by the
Bush administration in deals to open Iraq's oil to commercial
development and is likely to stoke criticism." This scoop, however,
reflected none of the evidence -- long available -- of the direct
involvement of Bush administration and U.S. occupation officials in
Iraq's oil industry. In fact, since the taking of Baghdad in April
2003, the name of the game has been facilitating relationships between
Iraq and U.S.-based and allied Western energy firms when it came to
what President Bush used to delicately call Iraq's "patrimony" of
"natural resources."
For instance, almost a year ago, the
Washington Post's Walter Pincus drew attention to a call by Bush's
Commerce Department for "an international legal adviser who is fluent
in Arabic 'to provide expert input, when requested' to 'U.S. government
agencies or to Iraqi authorities as they draft the laws and regulations
that will govern Iraq's oil and gas sector.'" The document went on to
state that, "as part of a U.S. government inter-agency process, the
U.S. Department of Commerce" would be "providing technical assistance
to Iraq to create a legal and tax environment conducive to domestic and
foreign investment in Iraq's key economic sectors, starting with the
mineral resources sector."
This was no aberration. Back in
March 2006, for instance, the U.S. Army issued a solicitation for a
two-year contract "to allow any organization or entity to support IRMO
[Iraq Reconstruction Management Office] (U.S. Embassy Baghdad) to
deliver an effective capacity development program utilizing
predominantly U.S. and European firms, universities, institutes and
professional organizations for personnel within the Iraqi Ministry of
Oil..." This was to include participation in "development programs"
offered by "private companies," long-term development through
"commercial training entities in the United States and Europe for Oil
and Gas specialists from the Ministry of Oil," and the implementation
of "joint government-industry activities." Translated out of
bureaucratic contract-ese, this meant that the U.S. would pay for
programs to, among other things, enhance relationships between the Iraq
Oil Ministry and you guessed it foreign firms.
In October
2006, the Department of Commerce (DOC) put out a call for experts that
was nearly identical to the later solicitation discovered by Pincus.
They were to aid a program facilitating "the creation of a legal and
tax environment conducive to domestic and foreign investment in Iraqs
[sic] key economic sectors, starting with the mineral resources sector"
and provide "expertise to DOC, to other [U.S. government] agencies, or
to Iraqi authorities on creating a legal and tax environment conducive
to domestic and foreign investment in Iraqs [sic] oil and gas sector."
Such an individual would, in fact, act "as a liaison between [the DOC's
technical assistance arm] and key stakeholders in Iraq (such as Iraq's
Ministry of Oil, or the oil authorities in Kurdistan)."
In
fact, the U.S. Trade and Development Agency notes that, in 2006 and
2007, it funded a "$2.5 million multifaceted training program for the
Iraqi Ministry of Oil" to "provide critical knowledge transfer and
establish long-term relationships between the U.S. and Iraqi oil and
gas industry public and private sector representatives."
It's
worth recalling that Iraq's oil bureaucrats, about to receive such
"critical knowledge" and "expertise," were not exactly neophytes in the
world of oil management. They had effectively managed the Iraqi oil
industry from the time the five oil majors now slated to receive those
"service contracts" were tossed out of Iraq, when its industry was
nationalized in 1972, until the invasion of 2003. They had kept the
country's oil infrastructure going even after the disaster of the First
Gulf War of 1990-1991, even through all the desperate final years of
sanctions against Saddam Hussein's regime.
The Pentagon-Petroleum Partnership
Another
connection, long ignored in the mainstream, that reporters like Kramer
might consider pursuing when it comes to the complex ties among Iraqi
officials, the Bush administration, the Department of Defense (DoD),
and Big Oil is the overt Pentagon connection. The DoD is, as national
security expert Noah Shachtman notes, "the world's largest energy
consumer." And, when it comes to Pentagon gas-guzzling, its post-9/11
wars and occupations, especially in Iraq, have been a boon. While the
Bush administration has been working overtime to clear the path for Big
Oil's return to Iraq, the Pentagon has been paying out staggering
amounts of U.S. taxpayer dollars to the very oil majors now negotiating
with Iraq's Ministry of Oil.
According to recent reports, the
proposed Iraqi service contracts, which may be paid off in cash or
crude oil, will be worth $500 million each. That is roughly what the
Pentagon paid out on June 18th alone -- the day before the Times broke
its story about Big Oil's return to Iraq -- for natural gas and
aviation fuel. Over half the total amount, in excess of $268 million,
was handed over to one of the oil giants set to benefit from the Iraq
deal: BP (formerly British Petroleum). Only days earlier, two of the
other majors from the coterie of potential no-bid contractors, Exxon
Mobil and Chevron, nabbed contracts from the DoD -- in Exxon Mobil's
case, a $73 million deal for gasoline and fuel oil; in Chevron's, a $16
million contract for aviation fuel.
Keep in mind, however,
that -- although you won't learn this in your daily paper -- this has
long been standard operating procedure. Each of the oil giants named in
the original New York Times piece -- Exxon Mobil, Shell, Total, BP, and
Chevron -- regularly show up on the Pentagon's payroll. In fact, last
year, Iraq's new fave five took home more than $4.1 billion from the
DoD -- with Shell leading the way with $2.1 billion.
It's no
secret that the Pentagon relies on vast quantities of oil to power the
ships, planes, helicopters, heavy armor, and other ground vehicles
essential to its occupation of Iraq, nor that it regularly pays out
vast sums of taxpayer dollars to the very companies that U.S. advisors
have aided in working out oil deals with the Iraq Oil Ministry. Despite
ample evidence of the Pentagon connection, this circular and
mutually-reinforcing relationship has been almost totally ignored in
the mainstream media. But think of it this way: Your tax dollars have
given the Pentagon the opportunity to use up oil -- bought from the oil
majors, in prodigious quantities -- in order to create a situation in
Iraq in which those same majors will soon receive no-bid contracts to
make money off the Iraqi oil industry and, if all goes well, get far
better, longer term deals in the near future.
One Big, Happy, Oily Family
It
turns out that, despite that story the Times broke as if something
totally new were on the horizon, the Bush administration has been
facilitating ties between the Iraqi government and foreign oil
companies for years, and the same companies now likely to nab a no-bid
toehold in Iraq's oilfields are intimately tied in to the Pentagon to
the tune of billions of dollars annually. It's worth noting that most
of these firms have also been closely connected to Vice President Dick
Cheney from the early days of the Bush administration. In fact,
executives from Exxon Mobil, Shell, and BP met behind closed doors with
Cheney's energy task force in 2001, when the administration was
pounding out its energy policies, according to a White House document
obtained by the Washington Post. The Government Accountability Office
also found that Chevron was just one of several companies that "gave
detailed energy policy recommendations" to the task force.
It's
almost impossible to tease out all the interconnections between Big
Oil, the White House, the Pentagon, and the Iraqi Ministry of Oil,
since they are tied together in a web of contracts and mutually
supporting relationships built up over many years. However, just in
case the Times wants to set its staff loose on the recent past, there
is no mistaking the many ties that exist. (A small tip for Times
researchers: Skip the Times archives. They will be of little help.)
Should
further evidence be necessary, when it comes to those U.S. advisors at
work in Iraq, mainstream reporters need look no further than the
solicitations sent out by the Iraqi Ministry of Oil itself. Consider,
for instance, a recent "tender" for a contractor to drill "two deep
exploration wells" in the South Rumaila and Luhais oil fields in the
Basra District of southern Iraq. Not only does the solicitation (the
deadline for which is July 27, 2008) contain special instructions for
"Companies outside Iraq," but it asks potential contractors to send
their bids to the Ministry of Oil not in Arabic, but "in the English
language."
Nick Turse is the associate editor and research
director of Tomdispatch.com. He has written for the Los Angeles Times,
the San Francisco Chronicle, Adbusters, the Nation, and regularly for
Tomdispatch.com. His first book, The Complex: How the Military Invades
Our Everyday Lives, an exploration of the new military-corporate
complex in America, was recently published by Metropolitan Books. His
website, Nick Turse.com has been newly revamped and expanded.