A few journalists, however, are very well aware of the
boundaries. They consciously seek to exploit occasional gaps in the
corporate news blanket smothering reality, and to point the public to
facts and perspectives that discomfit the powerful.
The issue of
Iraq's oil illustrates the standard problem: incessant repetition of a
state-approved script, with tiny instances of solidly critical
reporting. Discussion of any possible relationship between the invasion
of Iraq and the US-UK thirst for oil - both as a hydrocarbon resource
and as a strategic tool for dominance - is close to taboo. If raised,
the topic is swiftly dismissed as 'conspiracy' talk.
It was only last month that news media reported the bombshell dropped by Alan Greenspan, former head of the US Federal Reserve:
"I
am saddened that it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge what
everyone knows: the Iraq war is largely about oil." (Bob Woodward,
'Greenspan Is Critical Of Bush in Memoir,' Washington Post, September
15, 2007)
After that remarkable line from his new book was made
public, Greenspan rapidly backtracked. He "clarified" that he was
talking about "security" and that oil was "not [...] the
administration's motive." (Bob Woodward, 'Greenspan: Ouster Of Hussein
Crucial For Oil Security,' Washington Post, September 17, 2007). The
media's attention has since moved away from such dangerous ground.
Instead, safe territory on Iraqi oil is defined by terms such as
'investment', 'stability', 'reconciliation' and 'equitable sharing of
resources.'
The basis for such discourse was established before
the invasion in 2003, when we were relentlessly told that Saddam's
weapons of mass destruction had to be rooted out and 'stability'
brought to the region. The doctrine of reconciliation and democracy was
reaffirmed when George Bush gave a speech in January 2007 in which he
set out 'benchmarks' to measure Iraq's 'progress'. Bush proclaimed a
noble aim for the Iraqi government, with US support:
"To give
every Iraqi citizen a stake in the country's economy, Iraq will pass
legislation to share oil revenues among all Iraqis."
Bush also
pledged that: "military and civilian experts [will] help local Iraqi
communities pursue reconciliation, strengthen the moderates and speed
the transition to Iraqi self-reliance. And Secretary [Condoleezza] Rice
will soon appoint a reconstruction coordinator in Baghdad to ensure
better results for economic assistance being spent in Iraq." ('"The
Most Urgent Priority for Success in Iraq Is Security," Bush Says,' New
York Times, January 11, 2007)
Thus, the approved framework of
oil revenue 'sharing', underpinning Washington's 'reconciliation' among
Iraqis, was decreed by the US president. And indeed this is the line
followed in the bulk of corporate news reporting. Consider the
following typical examples.
A Financial Times editorial hails a
"national reconciliation package" to include "a law governing the
country's oil and gas industry" and "directed at [...] discord between
Iraq 's ethnic and confessional groups." (Leader, 'The irreconcilable.
As deadlines pass, time is running out for a political solution in
Iraq,' Financial Times, June 7, 2007)
The Times notes the
guiding "principle that all oil revenues should be divided between the
Iraqi regions". (Carl Mortished, 'Western oil major's bid marks
breakthrough for troubled Iraqi industry,' The Times, August 23, 2007)
Ian
Black, Middle East editor of the Guardian, writes of a raft of measures
designed to tackle Iraqi debt relief. These include "a revenue-sharing
oil law", drafted with the help of that well-known benefactor, the
World Bank. (Black, 'Rice breaks the ice with Syria , but not Iran,'
The Guardian, May 4, 2007)
The 'anti-war' Independent writes of
"redistributing the cash [oil revenues] to the regions - which the new
oil law states must be done in proportion to regions' populations".
(Saeed Shah, 'Foreign companies in scramble for 10 new Kurdish oil
contracts,' The Independent, March 23, 2007)
Steve Negus, Iraq
correspondent of the Financial Times, even makes the classic
journalistic mistake of taking government "hopes" at face value:
"The
US hopes the oil law will reassure Sunnis that they will still receive
a solid share of national oil export revenues under a new political
order dominated by the Shia majority." (Negus, 'Iraqis try to curb
pressure on US to quit,' Financial Times, September 10, 2007)
To
date, no oil law has been approved by the Iraqi parliament despite
extraordinary pressure from the US and UK governments. Sticking to the
approved line, the FT's Andrew Ward writes of "oil revenues [...] being
distributed equitably to the provinces, in spite of the failure to pass
a national oil law". (Ward, 'Little political progress, White House
admits,' Financial Times, September 15, 2007)
The Reality On - And Under - The Ground
Contradicting
the thrust of the above mainstream version of events, PLATFORM, a
London-based human rights group monitoring the oil industry, argues
that the oil law "has been wrongly described as providing a mechanism
for sharing revenue among Iraq's sectarian groups; in fact, this law
does +not+ deal with that issue, which will be the subject of a
separate law, not yet drafted". (PLATFORM, 'The Iraqi oil sector,
privatisation and the UK's role,'
Submission to the Iraq Commission, 14
June 2007;
- our emphasis)
PLATFORM activist Eva Jasiewicz told us:
"The
mainstream media, with few exceptions, has uncritically reproduced
White House and Foreign Office propaganda over Iraqi oil policy. The
reporting has not been lazy; it has actively colluded in the repeated
circulation of US-UK lies over revenue sharing, oil for peace and
reconciliation as the goals of the law." (Email to Media Lens, October
9, 2007)
Jasiewicz continued:
"The story of the corporate
colonization of Iraq's oil, and potential dismemberment of the country
under a brutal military occupation, has been disappeared from the news
agenda. Reporters ignoring the political and economic realities at
stake in Iraq are guilty of deception and of promoting the neoliberal
agenda of economic takeover of Iraq."
The Federation of Oil
Unions, the largest trade union in the Iraqi oil sector with over
26,000 members, also starkly challenges the media message of
"reconciliation":
"Depending on how it is applied, the current
draft of the law could increase poverty, undermine state institutions
and worsen the conflict in Iraq." (PLATFORM, op. cit.)
In
reality, Orwellian-named 'production sharing agreements' are being
prepared which would hand over the lead role in the development of oil
resources to corporations under highly-profitable contracts of up to 30
years. Unsurprisingly, this has been met with considerable opposition
in Iraq. In response, the 'production sharing' terminology has been
dropped from later drafts of the law. But as Kamil Mahdi, an economist
at the University of Essex warns, "the content remains the same."
(Mahdi, 'No law for oil,' Red Pepper, August 2007;
http://www.handsoffiraqioil.org)
Such lucrative contracts are
being sought by US-allied sectarian and political blocks within Iraq,
all manoeuvring to gain control of Iraqi politics and state
institutions. Mahdi warns that the likely outcome is that "the majority
of Iraq's oil resources are to be surreptitiously privatised and handed
over to multinationals under the guise of decentralisation and
benefit-sharing." The draft law stipulates a "bizarre resource
management arrangement" that will have Iraq's regions scrambling over
each other in a desperate race to award oil contracts to corporations.
Any actual benefits will be reserved for "corrupt local elites and the
multinationals themselves."
Mahdi adds:
"The weak,
sectarian and fractious Maliki government has proved to be just what
the US needs at this time: one that is willing to acquiesce in US
military offensives and to pursue the handover of oil to the
multinationals, while at the same time applying the harsh economic
policies dictated by the IMF, particularly over the domestic price of
fuel." (Ibid.)
The UK government has played a key role by
boosting the lobbying efforts of oil multinationals. Six of these oil
companies collectively appointed lobbyists, the International Tax &
Investment Centre (ITIC), to push for Iraqi resources to be opened up
to long-term oil production contracts. ITIC was even advised by UK
Foreign Office and Treasury officials on how best to influence Iraqi
decision-makers.
Moreover, the main ITIC lobbying document,
'Petroleum and Iraq's Future', was sent to the Iraqi finance minister
in late 2004 by the British ambassador to Iraq. ITIC says that the
ambassador "formally" submitted it to the Iraqi minister, implying UK
endorsement of its contents. A diplomat from the British embassy played
a key role in organising a meeting of ITIC and its six corporate
sponsors with Iraqi ministers and officials in January 2005.
Since
the first draft of the oil law was completed in July 2006, British
officials in both Whitehall and Baghdad have actively worked on the
law. It was first seen by British officials at that time, fully eight
months before it was seen by members of the Iraqi parliament in March
2007. (
See PLATFORM, op. cit.; )
This scandal has barely caused a ripple across the corporate media.
Progress Is Needed Soon!
A
rare exception hinting at the truth about Iraqi oil was an Associated
Press report in March 2007 which described "close associates" of Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki expressing "fears the Americans will torpedo
his government if parliament does not pass a law to fairly [sic] divvy
up the country's oil wealth among Iraqis." American officials also made
it clear to the "hardline" Iraqi prime minister "that they want an
Iraqi government in place by year's end acceptable to the country's
Sunni Arab neighbors, particularly Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt." The
message from the Americans was stark and left al-Maliki "convinced he
would not survive in power without U.S. support." (Steven R. Hurst,
'Iraqi Leader Fears Ouster Over Oil Money,' Associated Press, March 14,
2007)
Then, in June 2007, a news story appeared at the top of the front page of the New York Times:
"U.S. Warns Iraq That Progress Is Needed Soon".
Admiral
William J. Fallon, the leading American military commander for the
Middle East, warned al-Maliki "in a closed-door conversation" of the
pressing need for the Iraqi government "to make tangible political
progress [...] to counter the growing tide of opposition to the war in
Congress." A major milestone of this "progress" is "to complete a law
on the division of oil proceeds." Clearly frustrated by Iraqi
intransigence, Fallon warned al-Maliki: "You have the power. You should
take the initiative." (Michael R. Gordon, 'U.S. Warns Iraq That
Progress Is Needed Soon,' New York Times, June 12, 2007)
Michael
Gordon, Pentagon correspondent for the New York Times, had been invited
to sit in on this "closed-door conversation". Gordon stated candidly
that "it was only at the end of the meeting that American officials
agreed that it could be on the record". In other words, as columnist
David Broder noted, the NYT's Pentagon correspondent was invited by the
US commander to sit in on "what would normally be a private meeting."
The signal to the Iraqi Prime Minister was obvious: not only will you
be pressured by the Americans to "make progress", but the pressure will
be boosted by publicising it globally via the front page of the NYT.
Broder added:
"From
an administration known for its secrecy, this deviation means only one
thing: So desperate is the need to push Maliki into action that even
the [ New York ] Times becomes a lever." (Broder, 'Failure on Two
Fronts,' Washington Post, June 17, 2007)
This bullying behaviour
is, of course, standard for Washington and well documented (see, for
example, Noam Chomsky, 'Failed States', Hamish Hamilton, London, 2006).
"I Trust This Meets With Your Approval": An Exchange With The BBC
On
September 6, a piece by BBC business reporter Robert Plummer, 'Little
progress on halting Iraq's decay', appeared on the BBC news online
website (
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6977728.stm).
Plummer amplified the standard US doctrine:
"Now the US wants Iraq to pass an oil law as a means of promoting reconciliation among different religious and ethnic groups."
We emailed him:
"What
evidence do you have that the US administration desires the oil law 'as
a means of promoting reconciliation'? Surely you would agree that is
rather different from reporting that the US +claims+ that is their aim?"
We
pointed out to Plummer that PLATFORM argues that the "law has been
wrongly described as providing a mechanism for sharing revenue among
Iraq's sectarian groups; in fact, this law does not deal with that
issue, which will be the subject of a separate law, not yet drafted".
(PLATFORM, op. cit.)
We also reminded him that there is
considerable concern that the proposed oil law would benefit western
(and other) corporations at the expense of the Iraqis themselves. We
asked him why he had marginalised, indeed ignored, such valid
perspectives. Within minutes, we received the following reply:
"When
someone has written a piece about one subject, it seems a bit perverse
to write asking why it wasn't about an entirely different subject. I
didn't set out to write about the rights and wrongs of the Iraqi oil
law -- I wrote about reconstruction and why it's costing so much money.
"I
didn't 'marginalise' or 'ignore' anyone's arguments. I simply mentioned
the oil law in passing, in a necessarily brief fashion, because it was
peripheral to my theme.
"The 'oil law' in my piece was shorthand
for the whole mass of oil-related legislation that is in prospect in
Iraq . I'm well aware that there are in fact four proposed interlocking
bills, only one of which has been drafted. I just thought that only a
lawyer would be interested in that level of detail.
"I'm sorry I
didn't write the piece you clearly wanted to read -- perhaps we can do
that at a later date." (Email from Robert Plummer, September 7, 2007)
It
is apparently a matter of "detail", that "only a lawyer would be
interested in", that legal measures for oil revenue 'sharing' have yet
to be drafted. Regular readers will be familiar with this standard plea
by professional journalists that there is 'insufficient space'.
In our reply, we pressed the point that Plummer had still not addressed:
"What
evidence do you have that the US administration desires the oil law 'as
a means of promoting reconciliation'? You haven't answered that point
in your reply. I provided you with the reference to PLATFORM because
there is substantial evidence that the oil legislation is about
conquest, not reconciliation." (Email to Robert Plummer, September 7,
2007)
We received a final response:
"Never let it be said
that we ignore the views of our readers. I have now amended the
sentence in question to read: 'Now the US wants Iraq to pass an oil
law, as +what it says is+ a means of promoting reconciliation among
different religious and ethnic groups.' I trust that meets with your
approval." (Email from Robert Plummer, September 7, 2007)
We replied:
"Many thanks for doing that. It's a small but important difference.
"After
the disaster that has befallen Iraq - and with Iran now in the
crosshairs - it's surely vital for all of us to regard any professed
government aims and pronouncements with scepticism, and to shine a
light on the underlying motivations that drive state policy." (Email to
Robert Plummer, September 7, 2007)
A similar challenge from
Media Lens to Andrew Ward, the Financial Times's White House
correspondent, on his reporting of the Iraqi oil law, elicited this
curious response:
"Newspaper deadlines do not, unfortunately,
allow for the cross-checking of every statement given by the White
House. But I will keep your email as reference for the next time I
write about the issue." (Email, September 21, 2007)
This reads
like a straightforward admission that the FT generally takes at face
value any statement issued by the White House, despite all the
deceptions of the war against Iraq.
Concluding Remarks - Not About Oil, Of Course!
The
real agenda behind Iraq's oil - the striving by powerful states,
particularly the US, for strategic control of the resource-rich Middle
East - has been all but ignored by the corporate media. When the truth
is glimpsed, it is waved away as very much a secondary aim trailing
behind the noble commitment to 'democracy'. As one Cambridge academic
noted in the Financial Times:
"The war in Iraq is not, of
course, about oil. Coalition troops are there to advance democracy and
to protect the innocent. But the consequences for the world's energy
markets of an unresolved conflict in a country that holds the world's
third largest accumulation of oil reserves cannot be ignored." (Nick
Butler, director of the Cambridge Centre for Energy Studies at the
Judge Business School, 'Iraq needs an "oil for peace" deal,' Financial
Times, September 12, 2007)
What is routinely missing from the
corporate news media is historical context shedding light on
Washington's real, rather than stated, motivations. Of central and
long-standing relevance is the 1945 US State Department description of
Saudi Arabian energy resources as "a stupendous source of strategic
power, and one of the greatest material prizes in world history".
Undiscovered oil fields in Iraq could well boost that country's
reserves to 300 billion barrels, even more than in Saudi Arabia.
Indeed, the whole of the Gulf region has long been considered "probably
the richest economic prize in the world in the field of foreign
investment." (Cited in Noam Chomsky, 'Hegemony or Survival', Hamish
Hamilton, London, 2003, p.150)
Based on copiously-documented historical evidence, Noam Chomsky writes of US power:
"The
basic missions of global management have endured from the early postwar
period, among them: containing other centers of global power within the
'overall framework of order' managed by the United States; maintaining
control of the world's energy supplies; barring unacceptable forms of
independent nationalism; and overcoming 'crises of democracy' within
domestic enemy territory." (Ibid., p.16)
But these truths,
necessary for any public understanding of world affairs, are deemed too
'radioactive' to be carried by the corporate media.