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While widespread ransacking was happening in Iraq after Baghdad fell, the
U.S. moved swiftly to secure the countrys oil facilities. But in the
months since the official end of the war, general looting and sabotage have
impeded even the oil industry, frustrating efforts to quickly return oil production
to prewar levels.
As of early July, the future of Iraqs oil is still a matter of speculation.
Rehabilitating oil facilities and preparing the ground for an expansion of
output will take time. Current projections are that because of widespread
looting, it will take 18 months just to return to prewar production levels
of 3 million barrels per day. [Neela Banerjee, Barrels of Oil Exported
for the First Time Since the War, New York Times, June 23, 2003]
The U.S. will has broad control over the Iraqi oil industry, principally
by means of a Development Fund for Iraq, into which all of Iraqs oil
export revenues, all funds left over from the UNs oil for food
program, and all assets of the former Iraqi government located anywhere in
the world are to be transferred. With such broad control, U.S. corporations
are well posed to reap enormous profits and control of the oil industry.
Pre-War Promises
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- American oil companies will have a big shot at Iraqi oil,
says Ahmad Chalabi, leader of the Iraqi National Congress (and current member
of the Iraqi Governing Council)
[Dan Morgan and David B. Ottaway, In Iraqi War Scenario, Oil Is Key
Issue, Washington Post, September 15, 2002.]
- The American undersecretary of commerce, Grant Aldonas, told a business
forum hungry for good economic news that a war in Iraq would open up
this spigot on Iraqi oil, which certainly would have a profound effect in
terms of the performance of the world economy for those countries that are
manufacturers and oil consumers.
[Michael Moran and Alex Johnson, Oil after Saddam: All bets are in,
MSNBC, November 7, 2002.]
- We will make sure that Iraqs natural resources are used for
the benefit of their owners, the Iraqi people
President George W. Bush [Speech at the Azores Islands, 16 March 2003.]
- Head of the Coalition Provisional Authority, Paul Bremer, commented As
Iraq began shipping crude oil today for the first time since the start of
the war, the U.S. administrator of the country broached the politically sensitive
issue of how oil revenue should be spent, proposing that some of the money
be shared with Iraqis through a system of dividend payments or a national
trust fund to finance public pensions.
Iraqs resources cannot be restricted to a lucky or powerful few,
Bremer said. Iraqs natural resources should be shared by all Iraqis.
[Bremer Broaches Plans for Iraqs Oil Revenue, New York
Times, June 23, 2003.]
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Post-War Realities
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- On May 22, 2003, the UN Security Council passed a resolution ending sanctions
on Iraq. Significantly, the resolution gave the U.S. decisionmaking power
over how the oil funds would be used with regard to relief, reconstruction,
disarmament and other purposes benefiting the people of Iraq.
[Colum Lynch, U.S. to Propose Broader Control Of Iraqi Oil, Funds
Washington Post, May 9, 2003.]
- On May 4, Philip Carroll was named to head an advisory board to the Iraqi
oil ministry. Carroll was chief executive officer (CEO) of Shell Oil, the
U.S. arm of Royal Dutch/Shell in the 1990s, and subsequently became head of
the construction giant Fluor, a company he ran until 2002. Carroll still owns
substantial stock in both of these corporations. He is not known as an Iraq
oil specialist and apparently had never been to the country prior to his appointment.
[Michael Renner, The Other Looting, Foreign Policy In Focus, July
2003.]
- The Bush administration is considering a provocative idea to pledge
some of Iraqs future oil and gas revenue to secure long-term reconstruction
loans before a new Iraqi government is in place to sign off on the proposal.
[The question is] whether the U.S.-led occupation administration in Baghdad
has the legal or moral authority to pledge future oil revenue as loan collateral
before the issue can be debated by elected Iraqis.
[Warren Vieth, US May Tap Oil for Iraqi Loans, Los Angeles
Times, July 11, 2003.]
- After the UN approved the Development Fund for Iraq, Bush signed an executive
order decreeing that any attachment, judgment, decree, lien, execution,
garnishment, or other judicial process is prohibited, and shall be deemed
null and void, with respect to the Development Fund for Iraq and all
Iraqi petroleum and petroleum products, and interests therein.
In other words, if ExxonMobil or ChevronTexaco touch Iraqi oil, anything they
or anyone else does with it is immune from legal proceedings in America.
[Steve Kretzman and Jim Vallette, Operation Oily Immunity, CommonDreams.org,
July 23, 2003.]
- Sir Philip Watts, chairman of Royal Dutch/Shell, commenting on the lack
of interest in investing in Iraqs oil infrastructure said, There
has to be proper security, legitimate authority and a legitimate process ...
by which we will be able to negotiate agreements that would be longstanding
for decades
. When the legitimate authority is there on behalf of the
people of Iraq, we will know and recognize it.
[Carola Hoyos, Oil Groups Snub US on Iraq Deals, Financial
Times, July 24, 2003.]
- Saboteurs blew up yet another section of a major oil pipeline to Turkey
today, the second time the route had been hit in three days. Black smoke and
flames swirled into the cloudless sky just a few miles from where U.S. soldiers
and Iraqi engineers had battled a fire caused by explosives Friday. The two
blasts, north of the town of Baiji, abruptly halted crude oil exports that
had begun Wednesday. The disruption costs Iraq $7 million a day in revenue,
officials say.
[Daniel Williams and Anthony Shadid, Saboteurs Hit Iraqi Facilities
Oil and Water Lines and Prison Targeted in New Ambushes, Washington
Post, August 18, 2003.]
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Michael Renner <mrenner@i-2000.com>
is a Senior Researcher at Worldwatch Institute and a policy analyst for Foreign
Policy In Focus. Erik Leaver is FPIFs policy outreach director and Bo
Palmer is a research intern for FPIF (online at www.fpif.org).
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