by Ted Nace
Published on Wednesday, April 18, 2007 by CommonDreams.org
In 1532, after capturing the Inca emperor Atahualpa, the Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro issued an unprecedented demand: fill a room, 22 feet long, 17 feet wide, and 8 feet tall, with gold. The Incas complied, but Pizarro executed Atahualpa anyway and promptly shipped the tribute to Spain. At today’s prices of gold, the value of the ransom (3,000 cubic feet of gold at $10 million per cubic foot) would be approximately $30 billion.
That’s a lot of money, and it confirms that as conquerors the Spaniards had a clear vision of what they were up to. Conversion of heathens was fine. Conversion plus precious metals was even better.
Applied to the Iraq War, the traditional logic of imperial conquest clears out the rhetorical cobwebs and clarifies the mind. After all, when you rule out “senseless violence,” there are really only two reasons that human beings fight. One has to do with abstract things-honor, dignity-as in “My family’s venerable name has been besmirched. Scoundrel, we meet at dawn.” The other has to do with concrete things-stuff-as in the actions that typically follow upon a sentence like, “Give me your shoes, punk.”
But most compelling of all is a conjoining of the abstract and the concrete, as in: “We’re spreading democracy-oh, and by the way, there’s a lot of oil in Iraq.”
Of course, everyone is aware of that oil, but it’s fair to guess that if pressed to calculate its actual value, most Americans would probably plead for mercy.
That number, however, can hardly be lost on the leadership of the United States. Bush, Cheney, and Rice, of course, all hail from the oil industry. They do know the value of a barrel, and they know how to measure a reserve. Though Bush may claim to dislike “fuzzy math,” it’s doubtful that he’s lost in the zeros on this one.
For the rest of us, it’s time to do the math.
According to a 2002 estimate by the Energy Department, the quantity of proven, probable, and possible reserves in Iraq is approximately 330 billion barrels. At today’s $64 per barrel, that’s $21 trillion dollars worth of oil.
By the way, that’s $70,000 per U.S. citizen or $200,000 per household (according to population estimates for 2007). Certainly enough to solve most people’s credit card issues.
Maybe this “war for oil” wasn’t such a bad idea after all!
But wait a minute. Are we really in Iraq to grab the oil? After all, America may be an empire, but is it really just like those ancient empires where the victor returned to parade through the streets with legions of captured slaves, tied together at the neck, and wagons obscenely piled with tribute?
Donald Rumsfeld, for one, denied the accusation in no uncertain terms. When asked by NBC’s Steve Kroft his response to those who claimed it was a war for oil, Rumsfeld retorted: “Nonsense. It just isn’t. There are certain things like that, myths, that are floating around. I’m glad you asked. It has nothing to do with oil, literally nothing to do with oil. … Oil is fungible, and people who own it want to sell it, and it will be available.”
Rumsfeld was correct in saying that whether or not the U.S. invaded Iraq, it would in all likelihood still have access to Iraq’s oil over the long term, simply by buying it on the open market. But the comment was disingenuous in that it ignored the immense potential for whoever controlled the resource to extract profit-today’s equivalent of slaves and glory wagons. And Iraq’s oil, which ranks among the cheapest in the world to pump ($.50 to $1.00 per barrel), is nothing if not profitable.
More telling than such disavowals are actual pieces of legislation currently pending in both the United States and Iraq. On the U.S. side, a little-reported portion of both the Senate and the House versions of the current appropriations supplemental, currently headed for conference committee, is a “benchmark” requiring the Iraqi Parliament to pass a new statutory framework for its oil industry known as the Iraq Oil Law.
Meanwhile, in Iraq, after years of behind-the-scenes drafting directed by the occupation authorities, the text of the Iraq Oil Law was leaked to the media shortly before being sent to Parliament by Prime Minister Maliki’s cabinet. The most notable feature of the law is a revival of an exploitive type of contract widely used prior to the rise of Arab nationalism in the 1960s, known as a production sharing agreement. Although the Oil Law uses an alternative term, “exploration and production contract,” the effect is the identical. The new arrangement would allow the bulk of Iraq’s reserves to be controlled by outside oil companies, privatizing what has until now been a nationalized resource under the auspices of the Iraq National Oil Company. It specifies the royalty that will be paid to Iraq: “12.5 percent of gross production, measured at the entry flange to the main pipeline.” And as if the rest of the law were not already explicit enough, Article 35(A) reiterates: “Holders of exploration and production rights may transfer any net profits from petroleum operations to outside Iraq after paying taxes and fees owed.”
If the law is passed, Iraq will part ways with the other major Middle Eastern oil producers, including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Libya, and Iran. Those countries all maintain national control over oil, bringing in foreign corporations only as needed using technical service contracts, under which control is not relinquished and there is no sharing of profits.
Significantly, the Democratic leadership brushed off suggestions by Congressman Dennis Kucinich that the Oil Law benchmark be deleted from the supplemental. Thus, when it comes to supporting the privatization of Iraqi oil, it’s hard to find even a crack of daylight between the positions of the Bush Administration and the Democratic Party leadership.
Why are we in Iraq? Sometimes the simplest explanations are the best. Philosophers call that the lex parsiminiae principle; others call it horse sense.
It really is the oil, stupid.
And by the way, stand back Pizarro. Your ransom doesn’t look so fantastic any more. You brought home $30 billion. We’re on the verge of $21 trillion. That room full of gold was a nice start. Let’s see: according to my arithmetic you only need to fill up 699 more rooms like that and you’ll tie our new record for spoils of war.
Ted Nace is the author of Gangs of America: The Rise of Corporate Power and the Disabling of Democracy (Berrett-Koehler, 2003, 2005).
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Comments (9)

Chato
said:
Charlie Atkinson
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Plan C “Charlie” for Iraq: A Ten Stage Strategic Alignment Framework for Salvaging Success through Rewards, Reconciliation and Reconstruction -- 9 April 2007 After four years of liberation, the battle for Iraq is finally joined. Whether there is a “Civil War”, a “Clash of Cultures” or simply “Chaos” in Iraq, there is certainly all of the above in the US on the question of Iraq. Cries of Yankee go home are heard in An Najaf today and cries of Yankee come home are heard in Congress, the Media and across the country. Still nobody has a vision, or a strategic solution that we can all generally support --- whether in the US or in Iraq. But everyone is speaking up. In the age of the “World is Flat”, where anyone’s voice can be heard, here is my fancifully serious four-year framework of where we are and a proposal for discussion for salvaging success: 1st The Spurge: (any of various mostly shrubby plants --family Euphorbiaceae, the spurge family, and especially genus Euphorbia -- that have a bitter milky juice) In the beginning, was President Bush (the Spurge) who determined that he should avenge the sins of omission of his father and finish the job in Iraq. 2nd The Scourge: (a person or thing that applies or administers punishment) Bush looked at Saddam Hussein and saw The Scourge -- a charter member of the Axis of Evil. 3rd The Submerge: (to cover; bury; subordinate; suppress.) Under Saddam Hussein, the country of Iraq was drowning in tyranny and corruption, lacked freedom and was racked with fear under a dictatorship. Based on the evidence presented at the time, almost everyone assumed that there were real threats to the world with WMDs and possible alliances with a Al-Qaeda. 4th The Purge: (to put to death or otherwise eliminate undesirable or unwanted members from a political organization, government, nation, etc.) With "Shock and Awe", Bush toppled Saddam Hussein to bring democracy and freedom to an enslaved people and to end the threat of presumed WMDs and Al-Qaeda to the rest of the world. 5th The Dirge: (a funeral song or tune, or one expressing mourning in commemoration of the dead.) Freedom and democracy without security and prosperity soon brought the country to chaos and a mournful state of despair. Virtually everyone now sees the situation as essentially hopeless, and those who are still hopeful are no longer to be believed. 6th The Surge: (a sudden or abrupt strong increase.) Bush determined that a change was needed and bet the farm on more security and equality and a new Hydro-carbon Law. The changing of the guard with Secretary of Defense Gates who sent General David Petraeus on a mission impossible, and the arrival Ambassador Ryan Crocker, and the arrival of additional troops and advisers met with little optimism of success. The new opposition in Congress and the Media and Citizens everywhere insisted on either benchmarks of success or withdrawal of support for a failed policy. 7th The Verge: (the limit or point beyond which something begins or occurs; brink) With new protection from the surge particularly in Baghdad, and new hope from an Arabic speaking US Ambassador and with the support of thousands of US advisers, boundaries were formed within which to achieve local successes, similar to walls of the Green Zone. Now a revised Hydro-carbon Law is on the table for consideration by the Iraqi Parliament. This New Oil Law, could, if properly formulated, truly benefit the Iraqi people and set the economic stage for reduced violence, greater prosperity and democratic values. In the darkest hour, Iraq could be on the verge of success. The Congress and the President both see the Oil Law as key to progress. But the Iraqis see the Oil Law, as currently formulated, as a disaster and have every incentive to wait the US out and not pass it. 8th The Splurge: (to indulge oneself in some luxury or pleasure, esp. a costly one.) How to formulate the Oil Law to bring about success? The Americans insist that investment is needed to grow the Oil Industry with high quality and environmental controls and lack of corruption. The Iraqis see the law as ceding control in a fashion that is not the practice of any other country in the region. The chances of the Oil Law passing the 275 member Parliament, as currently conceived and formulated, are grim. Without the Oil Law being “broadly accepted”, there will be war without end. But security comes first. The key to Plan C, “Charlie”, proposed here, is to modify the Hyrdro-carbon Law so as to distribute money, right away, both to every Iraqi Citizen, as provided for in the Constitution, and also to the Iraqi government for development. In this proposal, all citizens who sign on for the equivalent of Social Security will be paid monthly as a function of and contingent upon the decrease in violence and the increase in oil, electricity and water production. Everyone would have a stake in security and prosperity. This would lead to reinforcing democracy. A good time could be had by all. While General Petraeus is providing security jointly with the Iraqis and Ambassador Crocker is providing strategic hope, American Advisers must work with the Iraqi Parliament to modify the Hydrocarbon Law so that existing Iraqi Money ($10 Billion now available and earmarked for Development) could prime the monthly payment-to-the-people pump. The legitimate objections of the Iraqis must be answered and a truly balanced bill enacted. With passage and with all citizens and the government getting cash spending money, literally tomorrow, there would be less to fight over. Iraq has long been a socialist country. Everyone in Iraq could be reasonably solvent and called upon to help protect, build and grow their country...and have the reasons to do it. The iRaqis would collectively throw iRocks at the iNsurgents. 9th The Urge to Merge: (to push or force along; impel with force or vigor so as to cause to combine or coalesce; unite.) “Omnia Iraqia in tres partes divisa est” would be transformed to “ E Pluribus Unum.” The process of transformation would go from independent decentralized regions through centralization to integrated decentralized regions. With increasing security, prosperity and liberty, the different regions would be more likely to work together to increase mutual security, provide for the common defense, so that the monthly oil money would keep coming. 10th The Emerge: (to rise, as from an inferior or unfortunate state or condition.) Against all odds and all expectations and all predictions, and through the collective actions of all, Iraq can emerge as a secure, prosperous, democratic country and victory can be snatched from the jaws of defeat. The Oil Law, properly conceived and implemented, is the keystone strategic solution for Iraq. |
Venting Wasabi
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So many bloopers in this post, hard to know where to start. But this will do: "Based on the evidence presented at the time, almost everyone assumed that there were real threats to the world with WMDs and possible alliances with a Al-Qaeda." Almost NOBODY believed this tripe and the world saw historic demo's of opposition to the Bush invasion plans. there was NO EVIDENCE just hearsay, cherry-picked "facts" and just plain old LIES. Oh, and you cannot WIN this "war", beacuse it's not war it's OCCUPATION. |
Unregistered
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Ricardovitz
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I have paid a lot of tax dollars for my Iraqi Oil, yet I am paying $2.84/gallon at the pump. THERE AIN'T NONE OF THAT IRAQI OIL GETTIN INTO MY TANK! I say lets get rid of George W. Bush. We need a president who will do the following: 1. liberate the oil in Iraq from it's god forsaken people 2. make sure that no back-stabbing French-whores or Kraut-Nazis or Russian Mafia get their grubby hands on our oil. 3. Drop a bomb on France just for kicks and giggles and blame it on the Iranians. 4. Erect the largest oil rigs possible all across Iraq's oil fields and suck out every drop of oil, then ship it to America where it will be stored in huge underground tanks below Camp David. 5. Then concede to the Lemmicrats and get out of Iraq ahead of the time table laid out by Schmuck Jewmer, Nancy Pigoski, Hillary "that whore" Clinton, the Osama Obama, Al "fats" Gore, Howard Scream, Ted "old maggot-eyes" Kennedy. 6. Ah, hell, while we're at it, why not just pass a law alowing us to eradicate draft dodgers. We could invade Canada take back our draft dodgers and push over all of the indigenous Canadians to the Northern Territory and call it the "Trail of Beers". What do we need them for anyway? That pansey-assed Bush is asleep on the job - we need some real leader who isn't afraid to take actions that are in our country's best intrest - no more pussyfooting around! |
LADY LIBERTY
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Sven Svenson
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| Worse yet to see Americans standing idly by while the Bush team dismantles whats left of their constitional democracy. I imagine Americans as rabbits on a highway at night, caught in the glare of oncoming headlights but totally uncomprehending... Fortunately, the rest of us can see exactly what is going down in the USA and we want none of it! |
Ricardovitz
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Ain't no rabbits around here staring into headlights. It's DEER, and we in the Free World have a God given right to hunt deer, eat deer, skin deer, and mount their heads/antlers on our walls. So, we don't have too much problem with dumb 'old deer looking into headlights, and if'n we did, we'd just shoot a few more to keep their numbers down. Now, you Lemmings in the GSW (Government Slave World) ain't got no firearms, cain't shoot pesky rabbits - so's I suppose y'all have dumb old rabbits eat'n all of your crops, and blooding up your roads spreading disease. You all really are quite stupid. |
Vinny
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