Why the US is in Iraq
The president defines a permanent occupation and it is about the oil
In the wake of US Representative John Murtha’s quite reasonable call to stop the killing and maiming in Iraq on a rapid timetable, President Bush has begun a sweeping war propaganda campaign. The White House released a “Victory” strategy outline and the president began a series of rallying speeeches, the first of which was delivered from Annapolis last Wednesday.
Of course, the Bush strategy is laden with fantasy. I’ll just refer to Murtha, the only elected establishment figure, respected by the US military itself, who has come out telling it like it really is in Iraq. Here is how Sy Hersh analyzed the truth of Murtha’s position in an interview with Amy Goodman on Tuesday’s Democracy Now!:
And so, for Murtha to suddenly say it’s over, as he did three weeks ago or two weeks ago, as I wrote in this article, it drove the White House crazy. They were beyond mad, as somebody said to me, because they know that the generals are talking to him. So here you have a case where we don’t have — you know, the generals are terrified pretty much, as they always are. That’s just the nature of the game. But they don’t speak truth to power. They’re not telling the American people exactly what’s going on, and they’re clearly not telling the White House, because the White House doesn’t want to hear.So Murtha’s message is a message, really, from a — you can consider it a message from a lot of generals on active duty today. This is what they think, at least a significant percentage of them, I assure you. This is, I’m not over-dramatizing this. It’s a shot across the bow. They don’t think it’s doable. You can’t tell that to this President. He doesn’t want to hear it. But you can say it to Murtha, you can say it to Inouye, you can say it to Stevens.
Despite this deep pessimism evidently emanating from the US military itself, President Bush has set forth his “victory” agenda in such a way that the US would never leave Iraq. The way President Bush defines “victory” — “defeating the multi-headed enemy in Iraq — and ensuring that it cannot threaten Iraq’s democratic gains once we leave” — in fact ensures permanent US troop presence because the “democratic gains” are all defined in terms of US advantage. Gains for the US in Iraq hardly represent the true will of the Iraqi people, so the fight against the “multi-headed enemy” is really a fight against most of the Iraqi population. It is clear that the bulk of the Iraqi population never will accept US control of their economy and resources — making the need for direct US enforcement of its “gains” permanent.
If real information can be located, it is not hard to discern just how deep this opposition by Iraqis to US control of their country runs. According to a secret poll commissioned by the British Ministry of Defense and obtained by the Telegraph of London, 82 percent of Iraqis are “strongly opposed” to the presence of foreign troops in their country. Not only that, 45 per cent of people feel attacks on those troops are justified.
Just a few weeks ago, even the American puppets inside the Iraqi government along with Sunni opposition figures agreed to language in a communiqué at last month’s Cairo Conference sponsored by the Arab League recognizing “the legitimate right of all peoples to resistance”. Furthermore, the sentiment that the war should be settled and foreign troops should be removed from Iraq was widely shared by conference participants and Baathist operatives (who were excluded from the conference but were present nonetheless).
There would seem to have been a diplomatic opening there for extirpating the US from Iraq with at least a chance of some sort of reconciliation and avoidance of civil war. But as with Murtha’s proposal, the White House rejected the Cairo conference. Is it seen within the White House and some quarters of the Pentagon not to be in US interest to stop the violence in Iraq through US withdrawal and strong diplomacy? Without the US present, as Murtha I believe correctly suggests, the Iraqi forces would stand up on their own and could handle these matters without the bloodshed predicted all throughout the US media and governmental establishment.
Why UNSCR 1637?
Meanwhile, a month ago (November
the US ran Resolution 1637 through the UN Security Council. This went almost entirely unreported in US media. The main provisions in this resolution maintain the rapidly-narrowing “multinational” force (Italy, South Korea, and other formerly-willing coalition members are flying the coop in droves), and the DFI (Development Fund for Iraq). That buttons things up nicely ahead of the December 15 parliamentary elections, requiring a positive act by the new government in order for it to request removal of US troops and saves the embarrassing spectacle of a parliamentary vote requesting presence of the chiefly-American force – against the wishes of 82% of the Iraqi people.
The DFI has been the container for Iraqi oil revenue since May 2003 and was used by the US occupation administration (the CPA, or Coalition Provisional Authority) as a giant $20 billion slush fund that pales the much-celebrated Oil-for-Food program scandal. The underlying policy behind obtaining such a Security Council resolution would not seem to be an intention to leave Iraq anytime soon.
It is about the oil
Ananlysis of the real motivations behind the US attack, invasion, conquest, looting and indefinite occupation of Iraq leads to oil. While the White House Iraq “Victory” outline does have a few mentions of oil in its “Progress on the Economic Track” section, they are cursory and based on touting production numbers merely for propaganda effect:
Oil production increased from an average of 1.58 million barrels per day in 2003, to an average of 2.25 million barrels per day in 2004. Iraq presently is producing on average 2.1 million barrels per day, a slight decrease due to terrorist attacks on infrastructure, dilapidated and insufficient infrastructure, and poor maintenance practices. We are helping the Iraqis address each challenge so the country can have a dependable income stream….Even with this progress, Iraq continues to face multiple challenges in the economic sphere, including: Facilitating investment in Iraq’s oil sector to increase production from the current 2.1 million barrels per day to more than 5 million per day….
What the Bush “Victory” outline forgets to mention is that currently there are highly secretive negotiations being pushed for oil production sharing agreements or PSAs. A stunning new report from a UK group associated with the Institute for Policy Studies explains in great detail how a massive theft of control of Iraq’s oil is being planned and executed as the touted “democratic” elections are being used to legitimate US “gains” from the process:
In October 2005, a new Constitution was accepted in a referendum of the Iraqi population. Like much of the Constitution, the oil policy section is open to some interpretation. Apparently referring to fields not currently in production, it states:
“The federal government and the governments of the producing regions and provinces together will draw up the necessary strategic policies to develop oil and gas wealth to bring the greatest benefit for the Iraqi people, relying on the most modern techniques of market principles and encouraging investment”…
…The debate over oil “privatisation” in Iraq has often been misleading due to the technical nature of the term, which refers to legal ownership of oil reserves. This has allowed governments and companies to deny that “privatisation†is taking place. Meanwhile, important practical questions, of public versus private control over oil development and revenues, have not been addressed.
The development model being promoted in Iraq, and supported by key figures in the Oil Ministry, is based on contracts known as production sharing agreements (PSAs), which have existed in the oil industry since the late 1960s. Oil experts agree that their purpose is largely political: technically they keep legal ownership of oil reserves in state hands (3), while practically delivering oil companies the same results as the concession agreements they replaced.
Running to hundreds of pages of complex legal and financial language and generally subject to commercial confidentiality provisions, PSAs are effectively immune from public scrutiny and lock governments into economic terms that cannot be altered for decades.
In Iraq’s case, these contracts could be signed while the government is new and weak, the security situation dire, and the country still under military occupation. As such the terms are likely to be highly unfavourable, but could persist for up to 40 years.
Furthermore, PSAs generally exempt foreign oil companies from any new laws that might affect their profits. And the contracts often stipulate that disputes are heard not in the country’s own courts but in international investment tribunals, which make their decisions on commercial grounds and do not consider the national interest or other national laws. Iraq could be surrendering its democracy as soon as it achieves it.
There should be no doubt about why the US faces an insurgency in Iraq. And like the situation of the mid-20th century when foreign oil companies held concessions to Iraq’s oil on draconian terms, the insurgency is permanent as long as the US insists upon keeping its chokehold.
December 4th, 2005 at 05:54
i saw this story earlier and planned to post it as the story of the day over on my own site. about a half hour ago i started combing google for a good pic to use as the graphic for the article. eight pages deep and a photo stands out with ahmed chalabi’s head circled and i swear i’ve seen it before. lo and behold it is none other than the deep blade journal:
December 4th, 2005 at 05:58
apparently db doesn’t let me use html in my comments– my very first complaint about the site! here is the remainder of the above post with clumsy urls cluttering the text:
i saw this story earlier and planned to post it as the story of the day over on my own site. about a half hour ago i started combing google for a good pic to use as the graphic for the article. eight pages deep and a photo stands out with ahmed chalabi’s head circled and i swear i’ve seen it before. lo and behold it is none other than the deep blade journal:
http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://deepblade.net/journal/chalabi.jpg&imgrefurl=http://deepblade.net/archive/posts/2005_04_01_archive.html&h=345&w=460&sz=53&tbnid=1qpxX2L7X1wJ:&tbnh=93&tbnw=125&hl=en&start=149&prev=/images%3Fq%3Diraq%2Boil%26start%3D140%26svnum%3D10%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D%26safe%3Doff%26sa%3DN
i interpret this to mean one of two things:
1) i have actually wasted so much of my life online that i have truly reached the end of the internet. doug allen would say he’s seen it coming for years.
http://www.shibumi.org/eoti.htm
2) deep blade journal is in fact so important that it provides not only the most forward-worthy analysis of the weekend but its archives figure prominently in the search results for the best possible photos to accompany said analysis.
that, or the internet is simply a much smaller place than i had once believed. one way or another, i thought this coincidence was funny. as it turns out, i settled on a photo that turned up some hundred or so items deep in the search results, but i think it was a nice fit:
http://sotd2.blogspot.com/2005/12/why-us-is-in-iraq.html
one people,
one struggle,
isaac
December 4th, 2005 at 06:07
last but not least:
bush’s reference to the “multi-headed enemy” warrants some serious extended attention. i’ll try to write something of substance on this tomorrow over at sotd and i’ll drop a post back here when i do. the historical use of this type of language is on the short list of dissertation topics for me right now. anyway, more to come…
December 4th, 2005 at 08:51
I I remember correctly, the UK report includes an analysis of the implications of federalism in the context of obtaining oil wealth. If for example Iraq is divided into separate, confederate states this will impact on its ability to negotiate and manage the nation’s oil revenue due to the fact that, as the report states, ” they lack both the institutional experience and the consolidated weight of handling the entire countryÂ’s resources. The likely result would be more negative terms than could be achieved at a national level.” I feel that this is key to how private corporations under teh auspices of the US government have managed to gain leverage within a quasi “legal” framework, since this kind of arrangement would be illegal at a national level (if I understand the report correctly). In additon, federalism weakens the hand of Iraqi bargaining power since each region is, in effect, looking after number one. This may line corrupt Federalsit leaders for the time being, but in the long run, when they realise what impact of 40 year unnegotiable oil contracts will have on the entire country’s future they might think again. Then of course there is aspect of the excluded groups in Iraq who will have no say in the redistributon of the oil “wealth” (the crumbs). This, as we have seen already, will probably lead to toalt dissolution, ths keeping the federal regions busy thinking about that while the oil companies prosepect freely upon all the Iraq’s as yet unused oil fields. The report adds too that the fact that there are so many new fields to be prospected, and the fact that oil companies will have that contractual right to do so, will leave Iraq worse off in that a great deal of its revenue will go to oil companies.
It is really frightening to discern this missing link in the debate on Iraq. All of a sudden it all makes sense why Washington and some IGC croies were pusing for federalism. On the one hand it weakens national, and thereby sovreign, unity (leaglly and otherwise), thus facilitating a plethora or privatisation moves that will impoverish the country, while on the other hand, fedralism divides the country into warring ethnic factions which in turn maintains a necessary level chaos in order to further Washington’s sense of “order”. It is just so sad that some handpicked governmental Iraqis would even consider going along with all this. However, that might only be part of the truth since we now know that there is dissent (or awareness) within the Assembly regarding the state of affairs in that country. Let’s pray for a positive outcome.
December 4th, 2005 at 08:53
As usual, in a mad rush, I didn’t read through my garbled post. Please forgive me…
December 4th, 2005 at 22:44
Isaac, Wallsy, thanks for the contributions. Yes, the UK Crude Designs report is notable for offering projections about the effect on Iraq’s economic future under all sorts of scenarios. Iraq is such a huge oil province that there is no reason for the country to lay down and give away concessions — clearly it would have the wherewithall and resources to finance its own oil development. The British for 40 years of the 20th and now the US/UK in the 21st century have worked mightily to deny Iraq this privilege — now by committing the most serious crimes the leaders of countries can commit: Aggression and Crimes Against Peace.
Herein is a possible economic explanation for the turn in Iraq policy that occured during the summer of 1990 — Saddam Hussein was willing to do some nasty work for the West and mount some serious debt, especially against Iran, but he refused to play the game of the economic “hit men”. This term comes from the very fascinating book by James Perkins.
There’s a lot more to say here I’ll have to save for later.
December 4th, 2005 at 22:56
And Isaac, glad you’re picking up on this language of the “multi-headed enemy”. I found this quite striking in the president’s presentation. Also please see these Deep Blade posts:
Another Push of the Panic Button
The US murdered Fallujah
Note Nazi language, “bandits”
Paul Nitze Dead at 97
.
December 5th, 2005 at 04:12
A (very) brief explanation of the history of the hydra reference is now up over at sotd:
http://sotd2.blogspot.com/2005/12/why-us-is-in-iraq.html
Like I said in the first sentence or two over there, this elite vocabulary, what Marcus and I are calling the demonology of capitalism (I’m not sold on the term yet because it predates the historical origin of capital, but you have to admit it sounds *really* cool) is a fusion of mythological beasts and historical dissidents. Thus the hydra is conflated with serpents, bandits, pirates and witches as icons of class struggle are blurred together with religious heretics and otherworldly evils in an elite imagination that constructs itself over centures of human history.
The bandit (referenced above), for example, has been studied in E.P. Thompson’s Whigs and Hunters. The pirate is the center of Marcus Rediker’s latest work, Villains of All Nations. While in these two cases it is promising that popular imagination clings to pirates and brigands as heroes (RIAA be damned), it’s curious that after two millenia have passed schoolchildren and their parents still readily embrace Hercules as a hero and mindlessly digest rhetoric such as Bush’s.
On a personal level I’m very interested in the way ruling classes and lower classes accept or reject certain icons, and I’m particularly interested in this phenomenon in comparative historical perspective. To what extent were these legacies invoked in the revolutionary Atlantic? To what extent were these constructions accepted within their own time? Did pre-Roman Etruscan mythology serve the same purpose as it did in the empire, or today? What about in African, Egyptian, and other mythologies? Understanding the heroes and antiheroes of class struggle I think will go a long way to helping us understand revolutionary social change.