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Blood for oil?
Cato Institute ^ | 3/18/2003 | Jerry Taylor

Posted on 03/18/2003 11:01:47 AM PST by killjoy

Blood for Oil?

by Jerry Taylor

Jerry Taylor is director of natural resource studies at the Cato Institute.

Is the coming war with Iraq about oil when all is said and done? The anti-war movement seems to think so. I am not so sure.

Unless the peace movement has discovered telepathy, I doubt that it's in any better position to divine the hidden thoughts or secret motivations of George Bush and Tony Blair than I am. Arguing about unstated motives, therefore, is a waste of time -- claims cannot be proven or disproven.

Is it so difficult, however, to imagine that both Bush and Blair sincerely believe -- rightly or wrongly -- that a well-armed Iraq poses an intolerable danger to the civilized world? If access to oil were of concern to them, one might have expected members of their administrations to hint as much. The Thatcher and Bush administrations, after all, were quite open about the role that oil played in justifying the first go-around in Kuwait. Polls in the United States revealed at the time, moreover, that the public responded favorably to the argument. Why the supposed reticence now?

Regardless, it's difficult to know exactly what is being alleged when one is confronted by the slogan "No Blood for Oil!"

If the argument is that war is primarily being executed to ensure global access to Iraqi oil reserves, then it flounders upon misunderstanding. The only thing preventing Iraqi oil from entering the world market in force is the partial U.N. embargo on Iraqi exports. Surely if access to Iraqi oil were the issue, it would have occurred to Bush and Blair that removing the embargo is about $100 billion cheaper (and less risky politically) than going to war.

If the argument is that war is being undertaken to rape Iraqi reserves, flood the market with oil, bust the OPEC cartel, and provide cheap energy to western consumers, then war would be a dagger pointed at the heart of the "Big Oil." That's because low prices = low profits. Moreover, it would wipe out "Little Oil" -- the small-time producers in Texas, Oklahoma, and the American Southwest that President Bush has long considered his best political friends. Accordingly, it's impossible to square this story with the allegation that President Bush is a puppet of the oil industry.

In fact, if oil company "fat cats" were calling the shots -- as is often alleged by the protesters -- President Bush would almost certainly not go to war. He would instead embrace the Franco-German-Russian plan of muscular but indefinite inspections because keeping the world on the precipice of uncertainty regarding conflict is the best guarantee that oil prices (and thus, oil profits) will remain at current levels.

If the argument is that "Big Oil" is less interested in high prices than it is with outright ownership of the Iraqi reserves, then how to account for Secretary of State Colin Powell's repeated promise that the oil reserves will be transferred to the Iraqi government after a new leadership is established? Do the protestors think that this high-profile public commitment is a bald-faced lie? Moreover, if that's the real goal of this war, then I'm forced to wonder why the U.S. didn't seize the Kuwaiti fields more than 10 years ago.

If the argument is that this war is aimed at installing a pro-American regime more inclined to grant oil contracts to American and British rather than French and Russian oil firms, then it invites a similar charge that France and Russia are against war primarily to protect their cozy economic relationships with the existing Iraqi regime. Regardless, only one or two American or British firms in this scenario would "win" economically while the rest would lose because increased production would lower global oil prices and thus profits. Because no one knows who would win the post-war contract "lottery," it makes little sense for the oil industry (or the politicians who supposedly cater to them) to support war.

Moreover, the profit opportunities afforded by Iraqi development contracts are overstated. The post-war Iraqi regime would certainly ensure that most of the profits from development were captured by the new government, whose reconstruction needs will prove monumental. In fact, Secretary Powell has repeatedly hinted that Iraqi oil revenues would be used for exactly that purpose. Big money in the oil industry goes to those who own their reserves or who secure favorable development contracts, not to those who are forced to surrender most of the rents through negotiation.

If the argument is that the United States is going to war to tame OPEC (accomplished, presumably, by ensuring that a puppet regime holds the second largest reserves within the cartel), then it runs up against the fact that the United States has never had much complaint with OPEC. Occasional posturing notwithstanding, both have the same goal: stable prices between $20-$28 a barrel. The cartel wants to keep prices in that range because it maximizes their profits. The United States wants to keep prices in that range because it ensures the continued existence of the oil industry in the United States (which would completely disappear absent OPEC production constraints) without doing too much damage to the American economy. The United States doesn't need a client state within the cartel, particularly when the cost of procuring such a state will reach into the hundreds of billions of dollars.

Oil, however, is relevant to this extent: Whoever controls those reserves sits atop a large source of potential revenue which, in the hands of a rogue state, could bankroll a sizeable and dangerous military arsenal. That's why the United States and Great Britain care more about containing the ambitions of Saddam Hussein than, say, the ambitions of Robert Mugabe. Still, if seizing oil fields from anti-western regimes is the name of the game, why aren't U.S. troops massing on the Venezuelan border and menacing Castro "Mini-Me" Hugo Chavez?

In sum, the argument that the impending war with Iraq is fundamentally about oil doesn't add up. While everyone loves a nice, tidy political morality play, I doubt there is one to be found here.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: iraq; oil; war
Interesting take on things.
1 posted on 03/18/2003 11:01:48 AM PST by killjoy
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To: killjoy
I am willing to trade one pint of prime, HIV-free, AB+ blood for 1,000 barrels of brent crude.
2 posted on 03/18/2003 11:06:55 AM PST by wideawake (Causa finita est)
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To: killjoy
The author makes good points, but based on a rumor that I heard about the Bush Administration's "Energy Summit" in early 2001, there is certainly an oil angle to this war. But not what the anti-war folks would have us believe.

It goes a long way toward explaining why the records of that summit can't be released to the public.

3 posted on 03/18/2003 11:07:28 AM PST by Alberta's Child
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Comment #4 Removed by Moderator

To: dead
Blood for oil?

...and your chicks for free?

Dan

5 posted on 03/18/2003 11:10:04 AM PST by BibChr (apologies to Dire Straits)
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To: Alberta's Child
but based on a rumor that I heard about the Bush Administration's "Energy Summit"

Care to share the rumor?

6 posted on 03/18/2003 11:10:19 AM PST by killjoy
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To: killjoy
This article is correct in most respects, but it is wrong in one. There will be enormous pressure to open the Iraqi oil tap as far as it will profitably go immediately after the war. The money will be needed to finance Iraqi reconstruction and to quickly put cash in the pocket of Joe Abdul. Otherwise, you risk widespread disillusionment and unrest.

That will necessarily have the effect of depressing oil prices, although not to the point where total Iraqi revenues decline. That may wipe out the marginal Texas field producers, but that's life on the margin. Against that, the major economies will likely benefit from a decrease in inflationary pressure.

Yet remember that the new-found Iraqi oil revenues have to be spent somewhere. They aren't going to sell the oil to look at the money. Hospitals, computers, new roads, new schools, books, food, etc -- all the needs of life have to be bought from somewhere. You can bet that it won't be from France.
7 posted on 03/18/2003 11:10:52 AM PST by wretchard
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To: wretchard
There will be enormous pressure to open the Iraqi oil tap as far as it will profitably go immediately after the war.

The key point there is after the war. I think that is still some time away.

8 posted on 03/18/2003 11:12:39 AM PST by killjoy
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To: BibChr
Hey, speaking of Dire Straits, I just read that Mark Knopfler smashed himself up on his motorcycle in London yesterday. Broke his collar bone and a bunch of ribs crashing into a car.
9 posted on 03/18/2003 11:16:00 AM PST by dead
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To: killjoy
In other words, it all comes down to theft.

---max

10 posted on 03/18/2003 11:18:52 AM PST by max61 (Genius knows it's limits, yet stupidity knows no boundaries)
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To: killjoy
so what? Oil is a vital national interest. AND a personal interest. I heat my home with oil. cheap oil IS in my interests.

the whole idea that going to war over oil is bad, is a leftist agenda that society has swallowed whole and really counter to the truth - we NEED cheap oil.
11 posted on 03/18/2003 11:20:49 AM PST by camle (no camle jokes, please...OK, maybe one little one)
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To: killjoy
The French, Russian and Chinese oil agreements with Saddamn are all dead. When this war is over they won't have as sweet a deal with the new Iraqi government!
12 posted on 03/18/2003 11:22:08 AM PST by SwinneySwitch (Liberate Iraq! Support Our Troops!)
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To: killjoy
Print this article. Cut the verbiage down to the minimum to allow you to explain it in your own words. Right each point down on an optional sized note card. Laminate the cards. Attach to a ring for easy access. Whip them out whenever some dim-bulb dipsh*t starts blathering about blood for oil, make the puke look as stupid as he obviously is, and minimize the fallout from his uninformed sputum among all listeners.
13 posted on 03/18/2003 11:23:42 AM PST by apeman81
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To: Alberta's Child
Of course the fact that Iraq is an oil producing nation is a factor as to why the US decided that is was in our national interest to interfere. But it is not the reason we interfere.

The reason we interfere is because of who Saddam Hussein is. His own actions, against his own people as well as neighboring states, has made it clear that he in unwilling, or perhaps incapable, of either leading a nation of people or being a leader in the international realm. The litany of abuse of his own people and expansionist aspirations in the region are well documented, and need not be listed here. It is enough to say that his own actions have negated his ability to hold a position of leadership.

Having demonstrated in a horrific manner his inability to hold the position, it is clear that he must vacate it. There are basically two ways to achieve this end; Saddam leaves voluntarily or someone removes him.

The call went out for him to leave on his own more than a year ago. That same call went out last night, with the threat of overwhelming force behind. Hussein need only abdicate his position to avoid a war that will bring death to his people. Because of the very evil inside him that has caused the world to demand he be deposed, he thus far refuses to take the way most beneficial to the people. A vicious catch 22.

Refusing to leave peacefully, he has forced those willing to do the job the unpleasant duty of unleashing the dogs of war upon his nation, his people, for the sake of his own megalomania. Can he truly believe he has the slightest chance of maintaining his position?

How fortunate for the Iraqi people that the U.S. and its allies are the ones to remove him. No greater effort to minimize civilian casualties has ever been so strongly considered during so large a military undertaking. We put the concern for the lives of civilians on an equal par with concern for our soldiers. This been demonstrated on numerous occasions. It is a testimony to our dedication to freedom that we do so. We understand that the people of Iraq are the victims in this battle. Only Saddam and his minions are the enemy. Not exactly a historic position.
14 posted on 03/18/2003 11:56:18 AM PST by apeman81
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To: max61
Which words? The phrase "poor reading comprehension" comes to mind.
15 posted on 03/18/2003 12:16:25 PM PST by jiggyboy
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To: wretchard
Don't forget the UN is setting on around $50,000,000,000 of Iraqi money from the Oil for Food program. So I would say that a major move would be to reclaim this money for rebuilding while getting the oil wells and refineries back up to speed. There may even be a case for the Iraq government to add refining capability and export end products instead of crude. The refining capacity in the US was reach a few years ago and it would be easier to build capacity in Iraq than to try and get permits to build a new refinery in the US.
16 posted on 03/18/2003 12:18:58 PM PST by Kadric
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To: killjoy
If the argument is that war is primarily being executed to ensure global access to Iraqi oil reserves, then it flounders upon misunderstanding. The only thing preventing Iraqi oil from entering the world market in force is the partial U.N. embargo on Iraqi exports. Surely if access to Iraqi oil were the issue, it would have occurred to Bush and Blair that removing the embargo is about $100 billion cheaper (and less risky politically) than going to war.

This is the argument that I commonly use against the war for oil comments.

If the argument is that "Big Oil" is less interested in high prices than it is with outright ownership of the Iraqi reserves, then how to account for Secretary of State Colin Powell's repeated promise that the oil reserves will be transferred to the Iraqi government after a new leadership is established? Do the protestors think that this high-profile public commitment is a bald-faced lie?

From Blair's speech:

There should be a new UN Resolution following any conflict providing not just for humanitarian help but also for the administration and governance of Iraq. That must now be done under proper UN authorisation. It should protect totally the territorial integrity of Iraq. And let the oil revenues - which people falsely claim we want to seize - be put in a Trust fund for the Iraqi people administered through the UN.

Prime Minister Blair's Statement Opening Commons Debate

Therefore it is a moot argument.

Moreover, if that's the real goal of this war, then I'm forced to wonder why the U.S. didn't seize the Kuwaiti fields more than 10 years ago.

Exactly.

17 posted on 03/18/2003 12:42:57 PM PST by ravingnutter
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To: max61
In other words, it all comes down to theft.

The war for oil crowd's argument is that it all comes down to theft...this article clearly demolishes that argument. If you will check out my #17, Blair clearly stated that a proposal for UN administration of the the oil fields will be made.

18 posted on 03/18/2003 12:53:18 PM PST by ravingnutter
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To: killjoy
This war is multi-fasceted i.e. no one reason. There is geopolitical strategic positioning of military forces in order to project force in the mid-east and Asia which goes in part with remaining the sole superpower. There is the war against terror in genral and security for our ally Israel. Being in Iraq strategically positions us with massive force in the heart of Arab territoy. Syria and Iran are next.

Then there is two economic factors. First there is maintaining the dollar as the world currency and oil purchases in dollars exclusivley. Saddam signed his own death warrent when he switched to Euros, Iran is playing with them also and others were thinking about it. With us in Iraq the dollar reigns surpeme for petrol. Secondly, our economy is in a mess and the government and the Fed "fixes" are not working. Let's face it consumer spending is keeping us afloat but people are getting tapped out. They have borrwed as much as they can with the easy credit, cheap remorgages, etc. So how does the government get more money into consumer's hands? A tax cut would be nice but not politically doable in any meaningful size. Cheap oil is the ticket. It is really hard to comprehend the capacity and scale in which oil and oil products are used and the ramifications in manufacturing, shipping etc besides cheap gas and home heating. In short cheap oil is like a giant tax cut. With us in Iraq we keep their oil flowing freely and securley and bust Opec. And lets not forget the reserves land locked in the ex-soviet Stans (pipelines through Afghanistan and across the Caucusses). We will be safeguarding all of these routes - and of course we are really only concerned about spreading democracy and human rights.

19 posted on 03/18/2003 6:51:32 PM PST by u-89
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