Endgame for Iraqi Oil?
The Sovereignty Showdown in Iraq
by Jack Miles
The oil game in Iraq may be almost up. On September 29th, like a landlord serving notice, the government of Iraq announced that the next annual renewal of the United Nations Security Council mandate for a multinational force in Iraq -- the only legal basis for a continuation of the American occupation -- will be the last.
That was, it seems, the first shoe to fall. The second may be an announcement terminating the little-noticed, but crucial companion Security Council mandate governing the disposition of Iraq's oil revenues.
Tomgram: Jack Miles, Baghdad to Bush: You Have 14 Months
Before
the invasion of Iraq, while millions demonstrated in the streets, often
waving homemade placards with "No Blood for Oil" -- or equivalents like
"Don't Trade Lives for Oil" and like "How Did USA's Oil Get under
Iraq's Sand?" -- the Bush administration said remarkably little about
the vast quantities of petroleum on which Saddam Hussein's regime was
perched. The President did, however, speak reverently about preserving
not Iraq's "energy reserves" but its "patrimony," as he so
euphemistically put it. The American mainstream media followed suit,
dismissing arguments about the significance of Iraqi and Middle Eastern
oil as the refuge of, if not scoundrels, then at least truly
simpleminded dissidents who knew not whereof they spoke. Generally, in
our news pages and on the TV news, with Iraq at the edge of a
shock-and-awe invasion, Iraqi energy reserves were dealt with as if no
more than a passing thought, as if the Middle East's main export was
hummus.
Little has changed. When former Fed chief Alan
Greenspan recently indicated in passing in his memoir that the war was
"about oil," there was a brief firestorm of scorn in Washington; an
administration spokesperson termed it "Georgetown cocktail party
analysis" ("A refill of crude, please, straight up…") and Greenspan
quickly began to backtrack under the pressure. Oil? Who us? The Bush
administration's plans to protect the Oil Ministry in Baghdad and
Iraq's major oil fields amid otherwise unchecked chaos in April 2003
were certainly noted in the news, but went largely uncommented upon
(unless you were an Internet news jockey).
Here's the strange
thing about the Iraq oil "debate" in our media world. Call me crazy,
but if you were going to invade Iraq and oil wasn't right at the
forefront of your brain, you would be truly derelict, even if you
hadn't run a major energy services corporation or hadn't had a
double-hulled oil tanker named after you. Jack Miles, author of the
Pulitzer-Prize-winning book God: A Biography and the first writer to
consider Iraqi casualties at Tomdispatch (or probably much of anywhere
else) back in July 2003, now takes up the oil endgame -- of which,
except in the Web world, there has largely been neither a beginning
game. nor a middle game. Tom
Endgame for Iraqi Oil?
The Sovereignty Showdown in Iraq
by Jack Miles
The oil game in Iraq may be almost up. On
September 29th, like a landlord serving notice, the government of Iraq
announced that the next annual renewal of the United Nations Security
Council mandate for a multinational force in Iraq -- the only legal
basis for a continuation of the American occupation -- will be the
last. That was, it seems, the first shoe to fall. The second may be an
announcement terminating the little-noticed, but crucial companion
Security Council mandate governing the disposition of Iraq's oil
revenues.
By December 31, 2008, according to Foreign Minister
Hoshyar Zebari, the government of Iraq intends to have replaced the
existing mandate for a multinational security force with a conventional
bilateral security agreement with the United States, an agreement of
the sort that Washington has with Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and several
other countries in the Middle East. The Security Council has always
paired the annual renewal of its mandate for the multinational force
with the renewal of a second mandate for the management of Iraqi oil
revenues. This happens through the "Development Fund for Iraq," a kind
of escrow account set up by the occupying powers after the overthrow of
the Saddam Hussein regime and recognized in 2003 by U.N. Security
Council Resolution 1483. The oil game will be up if and when Iraq
announces that this mandate, too, will be terminated at a date certain
in favor of resource-development agreements that -- like the envisioned
security agreement -- match those of other states in the region.
The game will be up because, as Antonia Juhasz pointed out last March in a New York Times op-ed, "Whose Oil Is It, Anyway?":
"Iraq's
neighbors Iran, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia…. have outlawed foreign control
over oil development. They all hire international oil companies as
contractors to provide specific services as needed, for a limited
duration, and without giving the foreign company any direct interest in
the oil produced."
By contrast, the oil legislation now pending
in the Iraqi parliament awards foreign oil companies coveted,
long-term, 20-35 year contracts of just the sort that neighboring
oil-producers have rejected for decades. It also places the Iraqi oil
industry under the control of an appointed body that would include
representatives of international oil companies as full voting members.
The
news that the duly elected government of Iraq is exercising its limited
sovereignty to set a date for termination of the American occupation
radically undercuts all discussion in Congress or by American
presidential candidates of how soon the U.S. occupation of Iraq may
"safely" end. Yet if, by the same route, Iraq were to resume full and
independent control over the world's third-largest proven oil reserves
-- 200 to 300 million barrels of light crude worth as much as $30
trillion at today's prices -- a politically incorrect question might
break rudely out of the Internet universe and into the mainstream media
world, into, that is, the open: Has the Iraq war been an oil war from
the outset?
Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan
evidently thought so or so he indicated in a single sentence in his
recent memoir: "I am saddened that it is politically inconvenient to
acknowledge what everyone knows: the Iraq war is largely about oil."
When asked, Gen. John Abizaid, former CENTCOM commander who oversaw
three and a half years of the American occupation of Iraq, agreed. "Of
course it's about oil, we can't really deny that," he said during a
roundtable discussion at Stanford University. These confessions
validated the suspicions of foreign observers too numerous to count.
Veteran security analyst Thomas Powers observed in the New York Review
of Books recently:
What it was only feared the Russians
might do [by invading Afghanistan in the 1980s] the Americans have
actually done -- they have planted themselves squarely astride the
world's largest pool of oil, in a position potentially to control its
movement and to coerce all the governments who depend on that oil.
Americans naturally do not suspect their own motives but others do. The
reaction of the Russians, the Germans, and the French in the months
leading up to the war suggests that none of them wished to give
Americans the power which [former National Security Adviser Zbigniew]
Brzezinski had feared was the goal of the Soviets.
Apologists
for the war point out lamely that the United States imports only a
small fraction of its oil from Iraq, but what matters, rather
obviously, is not Iraq's current exports but its reserves.
Before
the invasion of Iraq in March 2003, media mogul Rupert Murdoch said,
"The greatest thing to come out of this for the world economy, if you
could put it that way, would be $20 a barrel for oil." In the
twenty-first century's version of the "Great Game" of nineteenth
century imperialism, the Bush administration made a colossal gamble
that Iraq could become a kind of West Germany or South Korea on the
Persian Gulf -- a federal republic with a robust, oil-exporting
economy, a rising standard of living, and a set of U.S. bases that
would guarantee lasting American domination of the most
resource-strategic region on the planet. The political half of that
gamble has already been lost, but the Bush administration has proven
adamantly unwilling to accept the loss of the economic half, the oil
half, without a desperate fight. Perhaps the five super-bases that the
U.S. has been constructing in Iraq for as many as 20,000 troops each,
plus the ill-built super-embassy (the largest on the planet) it has
been constructing inside the Green Zone, will suffice to maintain
American control over the oil reserves, even in defiance of
international law and the officially stated wishes of the Iraqi people
-- but perhaps not.
Blackwater and the Sovereignty Showdown
In
any case, a kind of slow-motion showdown may lie not so far ahead; and,
during the past weeks, we may have been given a clue as to how it could
unfold. Recall that after the gunning down of at least 17 Iraqis in a
Baghdad square, Prime Minister al-Maliki demanded that the State
Department dismiss and punish the trigger-happy private security firm,
Blackwater USA, which was responsible for the safety of American
diplomatic personnel in Iraq. He further demanded that the immunity
former occupation head L. Paul Bremer III had granted, in 2004, to all
such private security firms be revoked. Startled, the Bush
administration briefly grounded its diplomatic operations, then
defiantly resumed them -- with security still provided by Blackwater.
Within days, though, Bush found himself face-to-face in New York with
al-Maliki for discussions whose topic National Security Advisor Stephen
Hadley revealingly named as "Iraqi sovereignty." Who would blink first?
We're still waiting to see, but in the wake of an Iraqi
investigation ended with a demand for $8 million compensation for each
of the 17 murdered Baghdadis, Blackwater is reportedly "on its way out"
of security responsibility in Iraq, probably by the six-month deadline
that al-Maliki has demanded. Despite its disgrace, the well-connected
private security company continues to win lucrative State Department
security contracts. Blackwater expert Jeremy Scahill told Bill Moyers
that losing the Iraq gig would only slightly affect Blackwater's bottom
line, but could grievously inconvenience U.S. diplomatic operations in
Iraq. In forcing such a crisis on the State Department, the al-Maliki
government, whose powerlessness has been an assumption unchallenged
from left or right (in or out of Iraq), suddenly looks a good deal
stronger.
But oil matters more to Washington than Blackwater
does. In September, when the effort to enact U.S.-favored oil
legislation -- a much-announced "benchmark" of both the White House and
Congress -- collapsed in Iraq's legislature, the coup de grace seemed
to be delivered by a wildcat agreement between the Kurdistan Regional
Government and Hunt Oil of Dallas, Texas, headed by Ray L. Hunt, a
longtime Bush ally and a member of the President's Foreign Intelligence
Advisory Board. This agreement, undertaken against the stated wishes of
the central government, provides for the separate development of
Kurdistan's oil resources and puts the Kurds in blatant, preemptive
violation of the pending legislation. It makes, in fact, such a mockery
of that legislation that the prospect of its passage before the
Development Fund mandate expires is now vanishingly small.
Endgame for Iraqi Oil?
If
the mandate expires and the law is not passed, then what? Then others
in Iraq may well seek to follow the Kurdish example and cut comparable
deals with whomever they wish. The central government, even if it has
lost effective control of the Kurdish north and the Sunni west, could
well ratify resource-separatism by contracting for the development of
the oil resources in the territory generally remaining under its
control. Thus, a new, Iran-allied, oil-rich, nine-province Shiite Iraq
could match Kurdistan's deal with one of its own, perhaps even with
ready-and-willing China. Will any combination of American military and
diplomatic pressure suffice to stop such an untoward outcome?
Clearly,
some in Washington still think so. Shortly before the collapse of the
Iraqi oil legislation effort, Bush's Commerce Department began quietly
advertising for an Arabic-speaking legal advisor to help it in
"providing technical assistance to Iraq to create a legal and tax
environment conducive to domestic and foreign investment in Iraq's key
economic sectors, starting with the mineral resources sector." (Read:
starting with oil.) As it happens, the job description overlaps heavily
with that of the Development Fund for Iraq's existing International
Advisory and Monitoring Board, whose responsibility, according to U.N.
Security Council Resolution 1483, has been to see to it "that all
export sales of petroleum, petroleum products, and natural gas from
Iraq…. shall be made consistent with prevailing international marketing
best practices." Is the Commerce Department already planning for the
demise of this board? Like the super-embassy and the super-bases, this
bit of Commerce Department staffing-up bespeaks the urge to continue an
invasive American presence in Iraq, including Iraq's energy sector,
long after December 31, 2008.
But if the occupation is shut
down legally after that date and if Iraqi control over Iraqi oil
reverts -- legally, at least -- to something close to pre-war status,
that Commerce Department expert may find him or herself playing a
less-than-major role in Baghdad. Instead, expect a new role for Iraq's
hitherto excluded pool of domestic expertise. The Iraq National Oil
Company began operations back in 1961; its legacy includes a skilled
work force of trained oil workers. Notable, in fact, among those
opposed to the failed oil legislation is the Iraqi Federation of Oil
Unions. Its members object to provisions in the legislation that permit
the hiring of foreign oil workers rather than Iraqis and -- in classic
Bush Administration fashion -- exclude the union from any participation
in contract negotiations. The Federation's protests have attracted a
letter of support signed by six Nobel Peace Prize laureates.
Even
with Iraqi expertise duly factored in, oil remains a complicated
business, and foreign expertise and capital will remain indispensable
in Iraq. Still, for the Shiite-dominated central government, the most
trusted foreign supplier of supplementary expertise, manpower, and even
capital would seem to be Iran. For now, the United States is paying
many of the salaries in Baghdad; but Iran's president, predicting an
American withdrawal, has lately declared his readiness to "fill the
[regional power] gap, with the help of neighbors and regional friends
like Saudi Arabia, and with the help of the Iraqi nation." This
invitation to regional collaboration will surely strike the less
populous, militarily more vulnerable Saudis as disingenuous in the
extreme, but Iran may be hard to stop. As former ambassador Peter
Galbraith has explained: "Since 2005, Iraq's Shiite-led government has
concluded numerous economic, political, and military agreements with
Iran. The most important would link the two countries' strategic oil
reserves by building a pipeline from southern Iraq to Iran, while
another commits Iran to providing extensive military assistance to the
Iraq government." On Oct. 17, the al-Maliki regime flexed its
supposedly non-existent muscle yet again by awarding $1.1 billion in
contracts to Iran and China to build enormous power plants in Baghdad's
Shiite Sadr City and between the two Shiite holy cities of Najaf and
Karbala.
The prospect that, in the endgame for Iraqi oil, the
victor might be Shiite Iran (and indirectly Communist China) may help
explain recent American calls for the replacement of the devoutly
Shiite Prime Minister al-Maliki. Yet, even if American pressure leads
to al-Maliki's ouster, the Iraqi parliament cannot be ousted with him.
The prime minister's announcement that the next renewal of the
multi-force mandate would be the last came, in fact, in response to a
binding resolution in parliament that the next renewal, unlike previous
ones, may not be at the request of the prime minister alone, but only
with the advice and consent of parliament. It has voted once already,
in a non-binding resolution, to require the United States to set a
timetable for withdrawal.
Fragile as it is, the government of
Iraq enjoys international legal recognition, and the underestimated
al-Maliki is evidently not without resources when it comes to asserting
Iraqi sovereignty over American autonomy within Iraq's borders. In
"Blackwatergate," he found a remarkable pressure point, declaring that
no new law would be passed in Iraq until the Blackwater matter was
resolved to his satisfaction. Nor was al-Maliki necessarily whistling
in the dark when he warned his American critics, "We can find friends
elsewhere."
The expiration date that Iraq has now set for the
operation of a multinational force on its territory coincides almost
exactly with the end of the Bush administration. As that date nears,
the endgame question may become: How far can the administration go in
repudiating its own erstwhile agenda and returning Iraq to its pre-war
status -- that is, to U.S.-backed Sunni domination of Iraqi domestic
politics. That would, of course, result in armed Iraqi hostility to the
administration's enemy of enemies in the region, Iran, and a resigned
return to collaboration with the Saudi-dominated Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) in the management of the world oil
market, all under a largely offshore U.S. military umbrella. Will the
fallback dream now be the one the President's father entertained after
Gulf War I -- the creation in Baghdad of a kinder, gentler Saddam
Hussein with whom, to use the classic phrase, the U.S. can "do
business"?
Time will tell, but not too much time. The eerie
silence of the Bush administration about oil grows all the more
deafening as the price of crude climbs toward $100 a barrel. Blood for
oil may never have been a good deal, but so much blood for no oil at
all may seem a far worse one.
Jack Miles is senior fellow for
religious affairs with the Pacific Council on International Policy and
professor of English and religious studies at the University of
California, Irvine. He is the author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning God:
A Biography, among other works.
Copyright 2007 Jack Miles
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