FPIF Commentary |
The Costs of War for Oil
Bonnie Bricker and Adil E. Shamoo | October 19, 2007
Editor: Erik Leaver
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"We have to decide, as a nation, whether our need for Middle Eastern oil is more important to our future than our conduct as a moral and ethical people." Which brave presidential candidate would lay it on the line so clearly? None yet. And that's the problem with the national debate on the war in Iraq, and possibly, our foray into Iran as well.
Alan Greenspan, former chair of the Federal Reserve, has declared that "...the Iraq war is largely about oil" in his recently released memoirs. "People say we're not fighting for oil. Of course we are," said the Republican Senator from Nebraska Chuck Hagel to law students of Catholic University last September. "They talk about America's national interest. What the hell do you think they're talking about? We're not there for figs."
Yet, although anti-war activists decried the "blood for oil" connection from the beginning of the war, no honest conversations have occurred in the public to involve Americans in this discussion.
This is the debate that Americans should be having: on the one hand, America's economy is fueled by our use of energy to run our lives--fueling our cars and SUVs, our industry, our homes. The United States uses 25 % of the world's oil and but we're only 4% of the world's population.
We like to be cool in the summer and warm in the winter, and we love the freedom of choosing to use as much energy as we want. We also don't like anyone telling us that we have to change our ways. If we keep using energy the way we always have, we're going to need a dependable source of it to ensure that our children and grandchildren have access to the same way of life. But we have competitors for oil in the world marketplace--China, especially--and many argue that if we don't lock up Middle Eastern oil for ourselves now, we won't have it for our use in the very near future. That will mean paying even more for energy and allowing other nations to rev up their economic engines at our expense.
On the other hand, the cost of ensuring this oil supply is a hefty one. Americans are losing lives. A generation of veterans will be suffering through the vast wounds of this war. Our actions in Iraq have led to as many as a million Iraqi deaths and many more wounded, and displaced 4.4 million Iraqis. We have, in the name of "The War on Terror", created so many U.S. enemies around the world, that our college-age students sew Canadian flags on their backpacks when abroad in the hopes of disguising their American identities. As a result of this war, many Americans have come to accept that U.S. policy will include the moral and ethical disruptions of war--even when we have not been attacked by the people we invade, but rather are invading a weakened nation for the resource we desire.
Americans deserve this discussion so we can decide who we are and how we wish to solve this problem. Is it feasible or naïve to think we can use alternative energy sources instead of oil to address our needs? Is it possible to change our habits and our lives to accommodate lower energy needs- or will too many Americans reject any change in habit? And finally, are we really the noble Americans we like to think that we are, if we allow death and destruction of this magnitude to occur in our name? I'm still waiting to hear the honest debate from our presidential candidates, from our media, and even with our friends and neighbors.
Bonnie Bricker is a teacher and contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus. Adil E. Shamoo, born and raised in Baghdad, is a professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. He writes on ethics and public policy. He is an analyst for Foreign Policy In Focus. Both authors can be reached at: ashamoo@umaryland.edu.
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Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a project of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). Copyright © 2008, Institute for Policy Studies.
Recommended citation:
Bonnie Bricker and Adil E. Shamoo, "The Costs of War for Oil," (Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, October 19, 2007).
Web location:
http://fpif.org/fpiftxt/4656
Production Information:
Author(s): Bonnie Bricker and Adil E. Shamoo
Editor(s): Erik Leaver
Production: Erik Leaver |
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| Name: |
Nathan Scott |
Date: Oct 19, 2007 |
| Unfortunately, statistics do not support the direct assertion that we are at war in Iraq for oil. America receives the large majority of its energy from our neighbors (Mexico, Canada) and domestic production. Iraq's GWAR oil field (the largest in the world) is already in fairly steep free fall in terms of production, and the numbers show that America has never, nor will it ever get more than perhaps 5% of its Oil from Iraq.
I see the war in Iraq as a confluence of factors. No president in the history of our country has lost a reelection during a time of war. Afghanistan, the true source of 9/11, ended far too quickly for our president's taste and the palate of the average American voter. Have we already forgotten the multi-million dollar taxpayer funded political stunt "Mission Accomplished?" Is there really a question what the most pressing issue in his mind was at the time? Like most presidents approaching the conclusion of their first 4 years, reelection is #1, never mind the security and economic stability of the country they have been entrusted to protect.
Many companies entirely unrelated to oil that also make a killing during times of war provided another impetus to the administration. Contracts in Iraq for many enterprises, no just oil, have run into the trillions of dollars, fueling national debt and padding the pockets of those with the right connections.
It is almost giving the administration too much credit to say we are in Iraq for oil, this provides a logical explanation. The reality is much different. We are mired in this conflict because of the zealous religious ideologies of man that has lied, cheated, and abused his daddy's connections to get where he is today. There is no logic or rationale behind our current situation.
I respect Greenspan and his opinion, but do not take his word as canon. He is an intelligent man, but has not done a very stellar job stabilizing the American economy. His protectionist policies are laughable to anyone with more than a cursory view of economic policy. The very idea that we should accept and actually encourage some level of inflation has largely been discredited in recent years, and has been shown to hurt the middle class, those who have a little in savings, but generally do not have the time or expertise to place their money in areas that will provide ultimate returns, rather than just keeping pace with inflation. |
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| Name: |
leduck |
Date: Oct 20, 2007 |
| Moral country? Have you heard of Bikini atoll? Yes, I wish we'd deal with Peak oil through powerdown rather than sacking energy rich, inocent countries for their resources, but then again..., the indians in this country are still stuck on marginal desert. So my expectations are low. We can either take the high road or the low road and it appears the neocons have made their choice. |
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| Name: |
philip a. |
Date: Oct 22, 2007 |
| A great topic but much too brief. Is this part of a larger piece that we may expect soon? Also, does anyone know if a current and reliable poll exists addressing why Americans think we invaded and occupy Iraq? This would be a great way to start this critical national dialog. |
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| Name: |
|m| |
Date: Oct 22, 2007 |
| You ask, "Which brave presidential candidate would lay it on the line so clearly?" And you answer: "None yet." I believe Dennis Kucinich has laid it on that line just that clearly, and I for one, take him seriously. Is anyone listening? |
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| Discussion for this article has been closed. |
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