Why Did We Invade Iraq Anyway?
Putting a Country in Your Tank
by Michael Schwartz, TomDispatch
www.zmag.org, October 31, 2007
Lately, even Democratic candidates for
president have been weighing in on why the U.S. must maintain
a long-term, powerful military presence in Iraq. Hillary Clinton,
for example, used phrases like protecting our "vital national
security interests" and preventing Iraq from becoming a "petri
dish for insurgents," in a major policy statement. Barack
Obama, in his most important speech on the subject, talked of
"maintaining our influence" and allowing "our troops
to strike directly at al Qaeda." These arguments, like the
constantly migrating justifications for invading Iraq, serially
articulated by the Bush administration, manage to be vaguely plausible
(with an emphasis on the "vaguely") and also strangely
inconsistent (with an emphasis on the "inconsistent").
That these justifications for invading, or remaining, are unsatisfying
is hardly surprising, given the reluctance of American politicians
to mention the approximately $10-$30 trillion of oil lurking just
beneath the surface of the Iraq "debate" -- and not
much further beneath the surface of Iraqi soil. Obama, for example,
did not mention oil at all in his speech, while Clinton mentioned
it twice in passing. President Bush and his top officials and
spokespeople have been just as reticent on the subject.
Why then did the U.S. invade Iraq? Why is occupying Iraq so "vital"
to those "national security interests" of ours? None
of this makes sense if you don't have the patience to drill a
little beneath the surface -- and into the past; if you don't
take into account that, as former Deputy Secretary of Defense
Paul Wolfowitz once put it, Iraq "floats on a sea of oil";
and if you don't consider the decades-long U.S. campaign to control,
in some fashion, Middle East energy reservoirs. If not, then you
can't understand the incredible tenaciousness with which George
W. Bush and his top officials have pursued their Iraqi dreams
or why -- now that those dreams are clearly so many nightmares
-- even the Democrats can't give up the ghost.
The Rise of OPEC
The United States viewed Middle Eastern oil as a precious prize
long before the Iraq war. During World War II, that interest had
already sprung to life: When British officials declared Middle
Eastern oil "a vital prize for any power interested in world
influence or domination," American officials agreed, calling
it "a stupendous source of strategic power and one of the
greatest material prizes in world history."
This led to a scramble for access during which the United States
established itself as the preeminent power of the future. Crucially,
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt successfully negotiated an
"oil for protection" agreement with King Abdul Aziz
Ibn Saud of Saudi Arabia. That was 1945. From then on, the U.S.
found itself actively (if often secretly) engaged in the region.
American agents were deeply involved in the overthrow of a democratically
elected Iranian government in 1953 (to reverse the nationalization
of Iran's oil fields), as well as in the fateful establishment
of a Baathist Party dictatorship in Iraq in the early 1960s (to
prevent the ascendancy of leftists who, it was feared, would align
the country with the Soviet Union, putting the country's oil in
hock to the Soviet bloc).
U.S. influence in the Middle East began to wane in the 1970s,
when the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)
was first formed to coordinate the production and pricing of oil
on a worldwide basis. OPEC's power was consolidated as various
countries created their own oil companies, nationalized their
oil holdings, and wrested decision-making away from the "Seven
Sisters," the Western oil giants -- among them Shell, Texaco,
and Standard Oil of New Jersey -- that had previously dominated
exploration, extraction, and sales of black gold.
With all the key oil exporters on board, OPEC began deciding just
how much oil would be extracted and sold onto international markets.
Once the group established that all members would follow collective
decisions -- because even a single major dissenter might fatally
undermine the ability to turn the energy "spigot" on
or off -- it could use the threat of production restrictions,
or the promise of expansion, to bargain with its most powerful
trading partners. In effect, a new power bloc had emerged on the
international scene that could -- in some circumstances -- exact
tangible concessions even from the United States and the Soviet
Union, the two superpowers of the time.
Though the United States was largely self-sufficient in oil when
OPEC was first formed, the American economy was still dependent
on trading partners, particularly Japan and Europe, which themselves
were dependent on Middle Eastern oil. The oil crises of the early
1970s, including the sometimes endless gas lines in the U.S.,
demonstrated OPEC's potential.
It was in this context that the American alliance with the Saudi
royal family first became so crucial. With the largest petroleum
reserves on the planet and the largest production capacity
among OPEC members, Saudi Arabia was usually able to shape the
cartel's policies to conform to its wishes. In response to this
simple but essential fact, successive American presidents strengthened
the Rooseveltian alliance, deepening economic and military relationships
between the two countries. The Saudis, in turn, could normally
be depended upon to use their leverage within OPEC to fit the
group's actions into the broader aims of U.S. policy. In other
words, Washington gained favorable OPEC policies mainly by arming,
and propping up a Saudi regime that was chronically fragile.
Backed by a tiny elite that used immense oil revenues to service
its own narrow interests, the Saudi royals subjected their impoverished
population to an oppressively authoritarian regime. Not surprisingly,
then, the "alliance" required increasing infusions of
American military aid as well political support in situations
that were often uncomfortable, sometimes untenable, for Washington.
On its part, in an era of growing nationalism, the Saudis found
overt pro-American policies difficult to sustain, given the pressures
and proclivities of its OPEC partners and its own population.
The Neocons Seize the Unipolar Moment
The key year in the Middle East would be 1979, when Iranians,
who had lost their government to an American and British inspired
coup in 1953, poured into the streets. The American-backed Shah's
brutal regime fell to a popular revolution; American diplomats
were taken hostage by Iranian student demonstrators; and Ayatollah
Khomeini and the mullahs took power. The Iranian revolution added
a combustible new element to an already complex and unstable equation.
It was, in a sense, the match lit near the pipeline. A regime
hostile to Washington, and not particularly amenable to Saudi
pressure, had now become an active member of OPEC, aspiring to
use the organization to challenge American economic hegemony.
It was at this moment, not surprisingly, that the militarization
of American Middle Eastern policy came out of the shadows. In
1980, President Jimmy Carter -- before his Habitat for Humanity
days -- enunciated what would become known as the "Carter
Doctrine": that Persian Gulf oil was "vital" to
American national interests and that the U.S. would use "any
means necessary, including military force" to sustain access
to it. To assure that "access," he announced the creation
of a Rapid Deployment Joint Task Force, a new military command
structure that would be able to deliver personnel from all the
armed services, together with state-of-the-art military equipment,
to any location in the Middle East at top speed.
Nurtured and expanded by succeeding presidents, this evolved into
the United States Central Command (Centcom), which ended up in
charge of all U.S. military activity in the Middle East and surrounding
regions. It would prove the military foundation for the Gulf War
of 1990, which rolled back Saddam Hussein's occupation of Kuwait,
and therefore prevented him from gaining control of that country's
oil reserves. Though it was not emphasized at the time, that first
Gulf War was a crystalline application of the Carter Doctrine
-- that "any means necessary, including military force,"
should be used to guarantee American access to Middle Eastern
oil. That war, in turn, convinced a shaky Saudi royal family --
that saw Iraqi troops reach its border -- to accept an ongoing
American military presence within the country, a development meant
to facilitate future applications of the Carter Doctrine, but
which would have devastating unintended consequences.
The peaceful disintegration of the Soviet Union at almost the
same moment seemed to signal that Washington now had uncontested
global military supremacy, triggering a debate within American
policy circles about how to utilize and preserve what Washington
Post columnist Charles Krauthammer first called the "unipolar
moment." Future members of the administration of Bush the
younger were especially fierce advocates for making aggressive
use of this military superiority to enhance U.S. power everywhere,
but especially in the Middle East. They eventually formed a policy
advocacy group, The Project for a New American Century, to develop,
and lobby for, their views. The group, whose membership included
Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz and dozens of other
key individuals who would hold important positions in the executive
branch after George W. Bush took office, wrote an open letter
to President Clinton in 1998 urging him to turn his "administration's
attention to implementing a strategy for removing Saddam's regime
from power." They cited both the Iraqi dictator's military
belligerence and his control over "a significant portion
of the world's supply of oil."
Two years later, the group issued a ringing policy statement that
would be the guiding text for the new administration. Entitled
Rebuilding America's Defenses, it advocated what would
become known as a Rumsfeldian-style transformation of the Pentagon.
U.S. military preeminence was to be utilized to "secure and
expand' American influence globally and possibly, in the cases
of North Korea and Iraq, used "to remove these regimes from
power and conduct post-combat stability operations." (The
document even commented on the problem of defusing American domestic
resistance to such an aggressive stance, noting ominously that
public approval could not be obtained without "some catastrophic
and catalyzing event -- like a new Pearl Harbor.")
Saddam's Iraq and Oil on the Brain
The second Bush administration ascended to the presidency just
as American influence in the Middle East looked to be on the decline.
Despite victory in the first Gulf War and the fall of the Soviet
Union, American influence over OPEC and oil policies seemed under
threat. That sucking sound everyone suddenly heard was a tremendous
increase in the global demand for oil. With fears rising that,
in the very near future, such demand could put a strain on OPEC's
resources, member states began negotiating ever more vigorously
for a range of concessions and expanded political power in exchange
for expanded energy production. By this time, of course, the United
States had joined the ranks of the energy deficient and dependent,
as imported oil surged past the 50% mark.
In the meantime, key ally Saudi Arabia was further weakened by
the rise of al-Qaeda, which took as its main goal the overthrow
of the royal family, and its key target -- think of those unintended
consequences -- the American troops triumphantly stationed at
permanent bases in the country after Gulf War I. They seemed to
confirm the accusations of Osama bin Laden and other Saudi dissidents
that the royal family had indeed become little but a tool of American
imperialism. This, in turn, made the Saudi royals increasingly
reluctant hosts for those troops and ever more hesitant supporters
of pro-American policies within OPEC.
The situation was complicated further by what was obvious to any
observer: The potential future leverage that both Iraq and Iran
might wield in OPEC. With the second and third largest oil reserves
on the planet -- Iran also had the second largest reserves of
natural gas -- their influence seemed bound to rise. Iraq's, in
particular, would be amplified substantially as soon as Saddam
Hussein's regime was freed from severe limitations imposed by
post-war UN sanctions, which prevented it from either developing
new oil fields or upgrading its deteriorating energy infrastructure.
Though the leaders of the two countries were enemies, having fought
a bitter war in the 1980s, they could agree, at least, on energy
policies aimed at thwarting American desires or demands -- a position
only strengthened in 1998 when the citizens of Venezuela, the
most important OPEC member outside the Middle East, elected the
decidedly anti-American Hugo Chavez as president. In other words,
in January 2001, the new administration in Washington could look
forward to negotiating oil policy not only with a reluctant Saudi
royal family, but also a coterie of hostile powers in a strengthened
OPEC.
It is hardly surprising, then, that the new administration, bent
on unipolarity anyway and dreaming of a global Pax Americana,
wasted no time implementing the aggressive policies advocated
in the PNAC manifesto. According to then Secretary of the Treasury
Paul O'Neill in his memoir The Price of Loyalty, Iraq was
much on the mind of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld at the first
meeting of the National Security Council on January 30, 2001,
seven months before the 9/11 attacks. At that meeting, Rumsfeld
argued that the Clinton administration's Middle Eastern focus
on Israel-Palestine should be unceremoniously dumped. "[W]hat
we really want to think about," he reportedly said, "is
going after Saddam." Regime change in Iraq, he argued, would
allow the U.S. to enhance the situation of the pro-American Kurds,
redirect Iraq toward a market economy, and guarantee a favorable
oil policy.
The adjudication of Rumsfeld's recommendation was shuffled off
to the mysterious National Energy Policy Development Group that
Vice President Cheney convened as soon as Bush took occupancy
of the Oval Office. This task force quickly decided that enhanced
American influence over the production and sale of Middle East
oil should be "a primary focus of U.S. international energy
policy," relegating both the development of alternative energy
sources and domestic energy conservation measures to secondary,
or even tertiary, status. A central goal of the administration's
Middle East focus would be to convince, or coerce, states in that
region "to open up areas of their energy sectors to foreign
investment"; that is, to replace government control of the
oil spigot -- the linchpin of OPEC power -- with decision-making
by multinational oil companies headquartered in the West and responsive
to U.S. policy needs. If such a program could be extended even
to a substantial minority of Middle Eastern oil fields, it would
prevent coordinated decision-making and constrain, if not break,
the power of OPEC. This was a theoretically enticing way to staunch
the loss of American power in the region and truly turn the Bush
years into a new unipolar moment in the Middle East.
Having determined its goals, the Task Force began laying out a
more detailed strategy. According to Jane Mayer of the New Yorker,
the most significant innovation was to be a close collaboration
between Cheney's energy crew and the National Security Council
(NSC). The NSC evidently agreed "to cooperate fully with
the Energy Task Force as it considered the 'melding' of two seemingly
unrelated areas of policy: 'the review of operational policies
towards rogue states,' such as Iraq, and 'actions regarding the
capture of new and existing oil and gas fields.'"
Though all these deliberations were secret, enough of what was
going on has emerged in these last years to demonstrate that the
"melding" process was successful. By March of 2001,
according to O'Neill, who was a member of both the NSC and the
task force:
"Actual plans.... were already being discussed to take over
Iraq and occupy it -- complete with disposition of oil fields,
peacekeeping forces, and war crimes tribunals -- carrying forward
an unspoken doctrine of preemptive war."
O'Neill also reported that, by the time of the 9/11 attacks on
the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, the plan for conquering
Iraq had been developed and that Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld
indeed urged just such an attack at the first National Security
Council meeting convened to discuss how the U.S. should react
to the disaster. After several days of discussion, an attack on
Iraq was postponed until after al-Qaeda had been wiped out and
the Taliban driven from power in Afghanistan. It took only until
January 2002 -- three months of largely successful fighting in
Afghanistan -- before the "administration focus was returning
to Iraq." It wasn't until November 2002, though, that O'Neill
heard the President himself endorse the invasion plans, which
took place the following March 20th.
The Logic of Regime Change
With this background, it's easier to understand the recent brief,
but highly significant, flurry of controversy over a single sentence
in The Age of Turbulence, the bestselling, over-500-page
memoir by longtime Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan. He
wrote simply, as if this were utterly self-evident: "I am
saddened that it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge what
everyone knows: the Iraq war is largely about oil." As the
first major government official to make such a statement, he was
asked repeatedly to explain his thinking, particularly since his
comment was immediately repudiated by various government officials,
including White House spokesman Tony Fratto, who labeled it "Georgetown
cocktail party analysis."
His subsequent comments elaborated on a brief explanation in the
memoir: "It should be obvious that as long as the United
States is beholden to potentially unfriendly sources of oil and
gas, we are vulnerable to economic crises over which we have little
control." Since former ally Saddam Hussein was, by then,
unremittingly unfriendly, Greenspan felt that (as he told Washington
Post reporter Bob Woodward) "taking Saddam out was essential"
in order to make "certain that the existing system [of oil
markets] continues to work." In an interview at Democracy
Now! he elaborated on this point, explaining that his support
for ousting Hussein had "nothing to do with the weapons of
mass destruction," but rather with the economic "threat
he could create to the rest of the world" through his control
over key oil reserves in the Persian Gulf region.
Greenspan's argument echoes the logic expressed by the Project
for a New American Century and other advocates of aggressive military
solutions to the threat of OPEC power. He was concerned that Saddam
Hussein, once an ally, but by then a sworn enemy of U.S. interests
in the Middle East, would control key oil flows. That, in turn,
might allow him to exercise economic, and so political, leverage
over the United States and its allies.
The former Fed chief then elaborated further, arguing that the
threat of Saddam could be eliminated "by one means or another"
-- either by "getting him out of office or getting him out
of the control position he was in." Replacing Saddam with
a friendly, pro-American government seemed, of course, like such
a no-brainer. Why have a guy like that in a "control position"
over oil, after all? (And think of the possibility of taking those
embarrassing troops out of Saudi Arabia and stationing them at
large permanent bases in nearby, well-situated, oil-rich Iraq.)
Better by far, as the Cheney Energy Task put it, "to open
up areas of [Iraq's] energy sectors to foreign investment."
Like the Task Force members, Greenspan believed that removing
oil -- not just from Saddam's control, but from the control of
any Iraqi government -- would permanently remove the threat that
it or a broken OPEC could continue to wield economic leverage
over the United States.
Revealingly enough, Greenspan saw the invasion of Iraq as a generically
conservative action -- a return, if anything, to the status
quo ante that would preserve unencumbered American access
to sufficient Middle Eastern oil. With whole new energy-devouring
economies coming on line in Asia, continued American access seemed
to require stripping key Middle Eastern nations of the economic
and political power that scarcity had already begun to confer.
In other words, Greenspan's conservative urge implied exactly
the revolutionary changes in the political and economic equation
that the Bush administration would begin to test out so disastrously
in Iraq in March 2003. It's also worth remembering that Iraq was
only considered a first pit stop, an easy mark for invasion and
occupation. PNAC-nurtured eyes were already turning to Iran by
then as indicated by the classic prewar neocon quip, "Everyone
wants to go to Baghdad. Real men want to go to Tehran."
And beyond this set of radical changes in the Middle East lay
another set for the rest of the world. In the twenty-first century,
expanding energy demand will, sooner or later (probably sooner),
outdistance production. The goal of unfettered American access
to sufficient Middle Eastern oil would, if achieved and sustained,
deprive other countries of sufficient oil, or require them to
satisfy U.S. demands in order to access it. In other words, Greenspan's
conservative effort to preserve American access implied a dramatic
increase in American leverage over all countries that depended
on oil for their economic welfare; that is, a radical transformation
of the global balance of power.
Notice that these ambitions, and the actions taken to implement
them, rested on a vision of an imperial America that should, could,
and would play a uniquely dominant, problem-solving role in world
affairs. All other countries would, of course, continue to be
"vulnerable to economic crises" over which they would
have "little control." Only the United States had the
essential right to threaten, or simply apply, overwhelming military
power to the "problem" of energy; only it had the right
to subdue any country that attempted to create -- or exploit --
an energy crisis, or that simply had the potential and animus
to do so.
None of this was lost on the unipolar-minded officials who made
the decision to invade Iraq -- and were more ready than any previous
administration to spell out, shock-and-awe style, a new stronger
version of the Carter Doctrine for the planet. According to Treasury
Secretary O'Neill, Rumsfeld offered a vision of the grandiosity
of these goals at the first Bush administration National Security
Council meeting:
"Imagine what the region would look like without Saddam and
with a regime that's aligned with U.S. interests. It would change
everything in the region and beyond."
An even more grandiose vision was offered to the New York Times
by presidential speech writer David Frum a few days later:
"An American-led overthrow of Saddam Hussein, and the replacement
of the radical Baathist dictatorship with a new government more
closely aligned with the United States, would put America more
wholly in charge of the region than any power since the Ottomans,
or maybe even the Romans."
As worldwide demand for hydrocarbons soared, the United States
was left with three policy choices: It could try to combine alternative
energy sources with rigorous conservation to reduce or eliminate
a significant portion of energy imports; it could accept the leverage
conferred on OPEC by the energy crunch and attempt to negotiate
for an adequate share of what might soon enough become an inadequate
supply; or it could use its military power in an effort to coerce
Middle East suppliers into satisfying American requirements at
the expense of everyone else. Beginning with Jimmy Carter, five
U.S. presidents chose the coercive strategy, with George W. Bush
finally deciding that violent, preemptive regime change was needed
to make it work. The other options remain unexplored.
[Note: This commentary -- and most of the useful work on the role
of oil in Middle East and world politics -- rests on the remarkable
evidential and analytic foundation provided by Michael Klare's
indispensable book, Blood and Oil,The Dangers and Consequences
of America's Growing Dependency on Imported Petroleum. Readers
who seek a full understanding of these issues should start with
that text.]
Michael Schwartz, Professor of Sociology and Founding Director
of the Undergraduate College of Global Studies at Stony Brook
University, has written extensively on popular protest and insurgency,
and on American business and government dynamics. His books include
Radical Protest and Social Structure and Social Policy and The
Conservative Agenda (edited, with Clarence Lo). His work on Iraq
has appeared on numerous Internet sites, including Tomdispatch,
Asia Times, Mother Jones, and ZNET; and in print in Cities, Contexts,
Against the Current, and Z Magazine. His email address is Ms42@optonline.net.
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