The Looming War Is About
Oil
by Robert Fisk
The Independent newspaper
(UK) January 18, 2003
This looming war isn't about chemical
warheads or human rights: it's about oil. Along with the concern
for 'vital interests' in the Gulf, this war was concocted five
years ago by oil men such as Dick Cheney
I was sitting on the floor of an old concrete
house in the suburbs of Amman this week, stuffing into my mouth
vast heaps of lamb and boiled rice soaked in melted butter. The
elderly, bearded, robed men from Maan - the most Islamist and
disobedient city in Jordan - sat around me, plunging their hands
into the meat and soaked rice, urging me to eat more and more
of the great pile until I felt constrained to point out that we
Brits had eaten so much of the Middle East these past 100 years
that we were no longer hungry. There was a muttering of prayers
until an old man replied. "The Americans eat us now,"
he said.
Through the open door, where rain splashed
on the paving stones, a sharp east wind howled in from the east,
from the Jordanian and Iraqi deserts. Every man in the room believed
President Bush wanted Iraqi oil. Indeed, every Arab I've met in
the past six months believes that this - and this alone - explains
his enthusiasm for invading Iraq. Many Israelis think the same.
So do I. Once an American regime is installed in Baghdad, our
oil companies will have access to 112 billion barrels of oil.
With unproven reserves, we might actually end up controlling almost
a quarter of the world's total reserves. And this forthcoming
war isn't about oil?
The US Department of Energy announced
at the beginning of this month that by 2025, US oil imports will
account for perhaps 70 per cent of total US domestic demand. (It
was 55 per cent two years ago.) As Michael Renner of the Worldwatch
Institute put it bleakly this week, "US oil deposits are
increasingly depleted, and many other non-Opec fields are beginning
to run dry. The bulk of future supplies will have to come from
the Gulf region." No wonder the whole Bush energy policy
is based on the increasing consumption of oil. Some 70 per cent
of the world's proven oil reserves are in the Middle East. And
this forthcoming war isn't about oil?
Take a look at the statistics on the ratio
of reserve to oil production - the number of years that reserves
of oil will last at current production rates - compiled by Jeremy
Rifkin in Hydrogen Economy. In the US, where more than 60 per
cent of the recoverable oil has already been produced, the ratio
is just 10 years, as it is in Norway. In Canada, it is 8:1. In
Iran, it is 53:1, in Saudi Arabia 55:1, in the United Arab Emirates
75:1. In Kuwait, it's 116:1. But in Iraq, it's 526:1. And this
forthcoming war isn't about oil?
Even if Donald Rumsfeld's hearty handshake
with Saddam Hussein in 1983 - just after the Great Father Figure
had started using gas against his opponents - didn't show how
little the present master of the Pentagon cares about human rights
or crimes against humanity, along comes Joost Hilterman's analysis
of what was really going on in the Pentagon back in the late 1980s.
Hilterman, who is preparing a devastating
book on the US and Iraq, has dug through piles of declassified
US government documents - only to discover that after Saddam gassed
6,800 Kurdish Iraqis at Halabja (that's well over twice the total
of the World Trade Centre dead of 11 September 2001) the Pentagon
set out to defend Saddam by partially blaming Iran for the atrocity.
A newly declassified State Department
document proves that the idea was dreamed up by the Pentagon -
who had all along backed Saddam - and states that US diplomats
received instructions to push the line of Iran's culpability,
but not to discuss details. No details, of course, because the
story was a lie. This, remember, followed five years after US
National Security Decision Directive 114 - concluded in 1983,
the same year as Rumsfeld's friendly visit to Baghdad - gave formal
sanction to billions of dollars in loan guarantees and other credits
to Baghdad. And this forthcoming war is about human rights?
Back in 1997, in the years of the Clinton
administration, Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney and a bunch of other right-wing
men - most involved in the oil business - created the Project
for the New American Century, a lobby group demanding "regime
change" in Iraq. In a 1998 letter to President Clinton, they
called for the removal of Saddam from power. In a letter to Newt
Gingrich, who was then Speaker of the House, they wrote that "we
should establish and maintain a strong US military presence in
the region, and be prepared to use that force to protect our vital
interests [sic] in the Gulf - and, if necessary, to help remove
Saddam from power".
The signatories of one or both letters
included Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, now Rumsfeld's Pentagon deputy,
John Bolton, now under-secretary of state for arms control, and
Richard Armitage, Colin Powell's under-secretary at the State
Department - who called last year for America to take up its "blood
debt" with the Lebanese Hizbollah. They also included Richard
Perle, a former assistant secretary of defence, currently chairman
of the defence science board, and Zalmay Khalilzad, the former
Unocal Corporation oil industry consultant who became US special
envoy to Afghanistan - where Unocal tried to cut a deal with the
Taliban for a gas pipeline across Afghan territory - and who now,
miracle of miracles, has been appointed a special Bush official
for - you guessed it - Iraq.
The signatories also included our old
friend Elliott Abrams, one of the most pro-Sharon of pro-Israeli
US officials, who was convicted for his part in the Iran- Contra
scandal. Abrams it was who compared Israeli prime minister Ariel
Sharon - held "personally responsible" by an Israeli
commission for the slaughter of 1,700 Palestinian civilians in
the 1982 Sabra and Chatila massacre - to (wait for it) Winston
Churchill. So this forthcoming war - the whole shooting match,
along with that concern for "vital interests" (ie oil)
in the Gulf - was concocted five years ago, by men like Cheney
and Khalilzad who were oil men to their manicured fingertips.
In fact, I'm getting heartily sick of
hearing the Second World War being dug up yet again to justify
another killing field. It's not long ago that Bush was happy to
be portrayed as Churchill standing up to the appeasement of the
no-war-in Iraq brigade. In fact, Bush's whole strategy with the
odious and Stalinist- style Korea regime - the "excellent"
talks which US diplomats insist they are having with the Dear
Leader's Korea which very definitely does have weapons of mass
destruction - reeks of the worst kind of Chamberlain- like appeasement.
Even though Saddam and Bush deserve each other, Saddam is not
Hitler. And Bush is certainly no Churchill. But now we are told
that the UN inspectors have found what might be the vital evidence
to go to war: 11 empty chemical warheads that just may be 20 years
old.
The world went to war 88 years ago because
an archduke was assassinated in Sarajevo. The world went to war
63 years ago because a Nazi dictator invaded Poland. But for 11
empty warheads? Give me oil any day. Even the old men sitting
around the feast of mutton and rice would agree with that.
Robert
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