With 140,000 U.S. troops on the
ground, the largest U.S. embassy
in the world sequestered in
Baghdad's fortified "Green Zone"
and an economy designed by a
consulting firm in McLean, Va.,
post-invasion Iraq was well on
its way to becoming a bonanza
for foreign investors.
But Big
Oil had its sights set on a
specific arrangement -- the
lucrative production sharing
agreements that lock in
multinationals' control for long
terms and are virtually unheard
of in countries as rich in
easily accessible oil as Iraq.
The occupation authorities
would have to steer an
ostensibly sovereign government
to the outcome they desired, and
they'd have to overcome any
resistance that they encountered
from the fiercely independent
and understandably wary Iraqis
along the way. Finally, they'd
have to make sure that the
Anglo-American firms were
well-positioned to win the
lion's share of the choicest
contracts.
Dealing with the most likely
points of opposition began
almost immediately. While the
Oil Ministry, famously, was one
of the few structures the
invading forces
protected from looters in
the first days of the war, the
bureaucracy's human assets
weren't so lucky. With a stroke
of the pen, Coalition
Provisional Authority boss L.
Paul Bremer fired hundreds of
ministry personnel, ostensibly
as part of the program of
"de-Baathification." But, as
Antonia Juhasz, author of
"The Bush Agenda," told me,
"it wasn't an indication that
they were a party to Saddam
Hussein's crimes … they were
fired because they could have
stood in the way of the economic
transformation." Some fraction
were certainly hard-core
Baathists, but they were all
veterans of the country's oil
sector; they knew the industry,
they knew what the norms in
neighboring countries were and
they had no loyalty to the
occupation forces. Some had to
go.
That was true at the top as
well. Serving as oil minister in
the Iraqi Interim Government was
Thamir Ghadbhan, a
British-trained technocrat who
at one time had been chief of
planning under Saddam Hussein
and was widely respected for his
political independence and his
opposition to the previous
regime (Saddam had ended up
imprisoning him at Abu Ghraib).
But despite working closely with
American advisors, Ghadbhan was
replaced with Ibrahim Bahr
al-Uloum, a close associate of
Ahmed Chalabi, the exile favored
by some war planners to run the
country as a kindler and gentler
-- but no doubt just as corrupt
-- version of Saddam Hussein.
According to Greg Muttit, an
analyst with the British oil
watchdog Platform, Uloum at
first seemed to be a malleable
figure. He told the Financial
Times that he personally
favored PSAs and giving priority
to U.S. oil companies "and
European companies, probably."
But Uloum would later
publicly protest the elimination
of fuel subsidies, a key
provision of the country's
economic restructuring, saying,
"This decision will not serve
the benefit of the government
and the people. This decision
brings an extra burden on the
shoulders of citizens." He was,
as the
Associated Press reported,
given "a forced vacation." It
was, in the end, a permanent
vacation; Chalabi, who was
deputy prime minister at the
time, took over the job himself
(as "acting" minister for 30
days, but his term would last a
year). Chalabi had no previous
experience in the oil biz, but
was a reliable, pro-Western
figure with little in the way of
nationalist zeal to get in the
way of being a good lap dog. As
leader of the Iraqi National
Congress, he had said he favored
the creation of a U.S.-led
consortium to develop Iraq's oil
fields. "American companies will
have a big shot at Iraqi oil,"
Chalabi told the
Washington Post in
2002.
According to Alexander
Cockburn, Chalabi also
orchestrated the ouster of
Mohammed Jibouri, executive
director of the state's oil
marketing agency, who had
offended the Swiss giant
Glencore by telling its
executives that they couldn't
trade Iraqi oil after their
extensive dealings with Saddam
Hussein.
An emerging, although still
fragile, civil society was
another source of potential
trouble. Iraqi trade unions were
a thorn in the side of the CPA
-- shutting down the port of
Khor az-Zubayr in protest of
a rip-off deal with the Danish
shipping giant Maersk, halting
oil production in the south
to demand the rehire of laid-off
Iraqi workers and
kicking Halliburton subsidiary
Kellogg, Brown and Root out
of their refineries. Perhaps
it's not a coincidence, then,
that the only significant law
that Paul Bremer left on the
books from the Hussein era was a
prohibition against organizing
public-sector workers. Raed
Jarrar, an Iraqi analyst with
the NGO Global Exchange, told
me, "They're having a lot
of legal problems."
Of course, none of that
guaranteed that the Iraqis would
stay on the preferred path,
especially after the election of
an ostensibly sovereign
government.
And that's where the most
common -- almost ubiquitous --
tool of neocolonialism, debt,
came into play. In this case,
massive, crushing debt run up by
a dictator who treated himself
and his cronies to palaces and
other luxuries, spent lavishly
on weapons for Iraq's war with
Iran -- fought in part on behalf
of the United States -- and owed
Kuwait billions of dollars in
reparations for the 1990
invasion.
To put Iraq's foreign debt in
perspective, if the country's
economy were the size of the
United States', then its
obligations in 2004,
proportionally, would have
equaled around $55 trillion,
according to IMF figures (and
that doesn't include reparations
from the first Gulf War).
Clearly, that amount of debt
was unsustainable, and the Bush
administration launched a
full-court press to get creditor
nations to forgive at least part
of the new government's debt
burden. Former Secretary of
State James Baker, long the Bush
family's "fixer," was dispatched
on a tour of the world's
capitals to cut deals on behalf
of the Iraqis.
The administration raised
eyebrows in the NGO community
when it adopted the language of
debt-relief activists to frame
their pitch. Bush, and Baker,
called it "odious" debt, debt
that financed the whims of a
brutal dictator and used against
the interests of the Iraqi
population. Under international
law, "odious" debt, in theory at
least, doesn't need to be
forgiven; it's written off as a
dictator's illicit gains. As one
might expect, wealthy creditor
nations have long resisted the
concept.
Debt-relief activists Basav
Sen and Hope Chu
wrote that the move "seemed
inexplicable at first." But it
soon became clear that Iraq's
debt-relief program was, in
fact, a way of locking in Iraq's
economic transformation.
The largest chunk of debt,
$120 billion, was owed to the
Paris Club, a group of 19
industrialized nations. Baker
negotiated a deal whereby the
Paris Club would forgive 80
percent of Iraq's debt, but the
catch -- and it was a big one --
was that Iraq had to agree to an
economic "reform" package
administered by the
International Monetary Fund, an
institution dominated by the
wealthiest countries and
infamous across the developing
world for its painful and
unpopular Structural Adjustment
Protocols.
The debt would be written off
in stages; 30 percent would be
cancelled outright, another 30
percent when an elected Iraqi
government accepted an IMF
structural reform agreement and
a final 20 percent after the IMF
had monitored its implementation
for three years. This gave the
IMF the role of watchdog over
the country's new economy,
despite the fact that its share
of the country's debt burden was
less than 1 percent of the
total.
Among a number of provisions
in the IMF agreement, along with
privatizing state-run companies
(which resulted in the layoffs
of an estimated 145,000 Iraqis),
slashing government pensions and
phasing out the subsidies on
food and fuel that many Iraqis
depended on, was a commitment to
develop Iraq's oil in
partnership with the private
sector. Then-Finance Minister
Adel Abdul Mehdi said, none too
happily, that the deal would be
"very promising to the American
investors and to American
enterprise, certainly to oil
companies." The Iraqi National
Assembly released a statement
saying, "the Paris Club has no
right to make decisions and
impose IMF conditions on Iraq,"
and called it "a new crime
committed by the creditors who
financed Saddam's oppression."
And Zaid Al-Ali, an
international lawyer who works
with the NGO Jubilee Iraq,
said it was "a perfect
illustration of how the
industrialized world has used
debt as a tool to force
developing nations to surrender
sovereignty over their
economies."
The IMF agreement was
announced in December of 2005,
along with a new $685 million
IMF loan that was to be used, in
part, to increase Iraq's oil
output. The announcement came a
month after Iraqis went to the
polls to vote for their first
government under the new
Constitution in order, according
to the Washington Post,
to spare Iraqi "politicians from
voters' wrath." That was a wise
idea; immediately following the
agreement,
gas prices skyrocketed and
Iraqis rioted.
The icing on the cake is that
the deal James Baker negotiated
with the Paris Club refers to
Iraq as an "exceptional
situation"; no precedent was set
that would allow other highly
indebted countries saddled with
odious debt from their own past
dictators to claim similar
relief.
The deadline the Iraqi
government must meet for the
completion of its final oil law
in December is a "benchmark" in
the IMF agreement.
In an
investigation for the
Nation, Naomi Klein
discovered that Baker had
pursued his mission with an
eye-popping conflict of
interest. Klein discovered that
a consortium that included the
Carlyle Group, of which Baker is
believed to have a $180 million
stake, had contracted with
Kuwait to make sure that the
money it was owed by Iraq would
be excluded from any debt-relief
package. When Baker met with the
Kuwaiti emir to beg forgiveness
for Iraq's odious debt, he had a
direct interest in making sure
he didn't get it.
Another major creditor was
Saudi Arabia. The Carlyle Group
has extensive business dealings
with the kingdom and Baker's law
firm, Baker Botts, was
representing the monarchy in a
suit brought by the families of
the victims of 9/11.
The most recent IMF report (PDF)
shows how successfully he
failed: "While most Paris Club
official creditors have now
signed bilateral agreements,
progress has been slow in
resolving non-Paris Club
official claims, especially
those of Gulf countries," it
says. It's likely that Iraq, a
country occupied for three
years, devastated by 12 years of
sanctions and with a per capita
GDP of $3,400, will end up
paying reparations to Kuwait, a
country with a per capita GDP of
over $19,000, for the five
months Saddam occupied his
neighbor in late 1990 and early
1991.
Iraq will still face a
mountain of debt even if it
meets all of the "benchmarks"
required of it -- the IMF
expects the country's debt
service to equal five percent of
its economic output in 2011 and
warns that even a minor price
shock in the oil market "would
require significant borrowing
from the international markets
to close the financing gaps."
"Sovereign" debt is
transferable between
governments; if a new strongman
arises or Iraq becomes a loose
federation, the debt will remain
on the books and defaulting on
it, while a possibility, has
serious long-term consequences.
All of this is about bringing
different forms of pressure onto
Iraq's nascent government, not
controlling it, and it's an
important distinction. Before
and since the "handover" to
Iraq's government, the Green
Zone has been overrun with
"advisers" from Big Oil. Aram
Roston wrote, "It's clear that
there is not just the one Iraqi
Oil Ministry, but a parallel
'shadow' ministry run by
American advisers." In business,
that's known as "positioning."
Phillip Carroll, a former
chief executive with Royal
Dutch/Shell and a 15-member
"board of advisors" were
appointed to oversee Iraq's oil
industry during the transition
period. According to the
Guardian, the group
"would represent Iraq at
meetings of OPEC." Carroll had
been working with the Pentagon
for months before the invasion
-- even while the administration
was still insisting that it
sought a peaceful resolution to
the Iraq crisis -- "developing
contingency plans for Iraq's oil
sector in the event of war."
According to the Houston
Chronicle, "He assumed his
work was completed, he said,
until Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld called him shortly
after the U.S.-led invasion
began and offered him the oil
adviser's job." Carroll, in
addition to running Shell Oil in
the United States, was a former
CEO of the Fluor Corp., a
well-connected oil services firm
with extensive projects in Saudi
Arabia and Kuwait, and at least
$1.6 billion in contracts for
Iraq's reconstruction. He was
joined by Gary Vogler, a former
executive with ExxonMobile, in
Iraq's Office of Reconstruction
and Humanitarian Assistance.
After spending six months in
the post, Carroll was replaced
by Robert E. McKee III, a former
ConocoPhillips executive.
According to the
Houston Chronicle,
"His selection as the Bush
administration's energy czar in
Iraq" drew fire from
congressional Democrats "because
of his ties to the prime
contractor in the Iraqi oil
fields, Houston-based
Halliburton Co. He's the
chairman of a venture
partitioned by the … firm."
The administration selected
Chevron Vice President Norm
Szydlowski to serve as a liaison
between the Coalition
Provisional Authority and the
Iraqi Oil Ministry. Now the CEO
of the appropriately named
Colonial Pipeline Co., he
continues to work with the Iraq
Energy Roundtable, a project of
the U.S. Trade and Development
Agency, which recently sponsored
a meeting to "bring together oil
and gas sector leaders in the
U.S. with key decision makers
from the Iraq Ministry of Oil."
Terry Adams and Bob Morgan of
BP, and Mike Stinson of
ConocoPhillips would also serve
as advisors during the
transition.
After the CPA handed over the
reigns to Iraq's interim
government, the embassy's
"shadow" oil ministry continued
to work closely with the Iraqis
to shape future oil policy.
Platform's Greg Muttit wrote that "senior oil advisers -- now based within the Iraq
Reconstruction Management Office
(IRMO) in the U.S. Embassy ...
included executives from
ChevronTexaco and Unocal." After
the handover, a senior U.S.
official said: "We're still
here. We'll be paying a lot of
attention, and we'll have a lot
of influence. We're going to
have the world's largest
diplomatic mission with a
significant amount of political
weight."
The majors have also engaged
in good, old-fashioned lobbying.
In 2004, Shell advertised for an
Iraqi lobbyist with good
contacts among Iraq's emerging
elites. The firm sought "a
person of Iraqi extraction with
strong family connections and an
insight into the network of
families of significance within
Iraq." According to
Platform, just weeks after
the invasion, in a meeting with
oil company execs and Australian
Foreign Minister Alexander
Downer in London, former British
Foreign Secretary Sir Malcolm
Rifkind promised to personally
lobby Dick Cheney for contracts
on behalf of several firms,
including Shell.
Meanwhile, major oil firms
were positioning themselves so
that they'd have the best
contacts in the new government.
According to the
Associated Press, "The
world's three biggest integrated
oil companies" -- BP, ExxonMobil
and Royal Dutch/Shell -- "struck
cooperation or training deals
with Iraq" in 2005. "It's a way
to maintain contact and get the
oil officials to know about
them," former Iraqi Oil Minister
Issam Chalabi told the AP. And
it seems to have worked; in May,
Iraq's current oil minister,
Husayn al-Shahristani, said that
one of his top priorities would
be to finalize an oil law and
sign contracts with "the largest
companies."
Washington has its hands all
over the drafting of that law.
Early on, in 2003, USAID
commissioned BearingPoint, Inc.
-- the new name for the
scandal-plagued Arthur Anderson
Consulting -- to submit
recommendations for the
development of Iraq's oil
sector. BearingPoint was the
firm that designed the country's
economic transformation under a
previous USAID contract, so it
was no surprise that its report
reinforced the preference for
PSAs that "everybody [kept] kept
coming back to" during meetings
of the State Department's
"Future of Iraq Project."
In February, just months
after the Iraqis elected their
first constitutional government,
USAID sent a BearingPoint
adviser to provide the Iraqi Oil
Ministry "legal and regulatory
advice in drafting the framework
of petroleum and other
energy-related legislation,
including foreign investment."
According to Muttit, the Iraqi
Parliament had not yet seen a
draft of the oil law as of July,
but by that time it had already
been reviewed and commented on
by U.S. Energy Secretary Sam
Bodman, who also "arranged for
Dr. Al-Shahristani to meet with
nine major oil companies --
including Shell, BP, ExxonMobil,
ChevronTexaco and ConocoPhillips
-- for them to comment on the
draft."
All of these points of
pressure are only what we can
see in the light of day. There
is certainly much more occurring
under the table. Raed Jarrar
told me that he "was personally
familiar with the kind of
intimidation that can be brought
by both the U.S. military and
civilian" personnel, and that he
would be shocked if "multiple
millions of dollars in bribes"
were not changing hands. The IMF
noted in its latest report (PDF)
that "corruption related to the
production and distribution of
refined fuel products was
rampant." Last March,
450 Oil Ministry employees
were fired for suspected
corruption, and Mohammed
al-Abudi, the Oil Ministry's
director general for rrilling,
said that "administrative
corruption" was pervasive. "The
robberies and thefts are taking
place on a daily basis on all
levels," he said, "committed by
low-level government employees
and by high officials in
leadership positions of the
Iraqi state." The same day that
the U.N. legitimized the
occupation, George Bush signed
Executive Order 13303 providing
full legal immunity to all oil
companies doing business in Iraq
in order to facilitate the
country's "orderly
reconstruction."
Yet, despite a five-year
effort, Big Oil still sits on
the sidelines, wary of the
disorder and violence that's
plagued the country. Ironically,
it appears that China may well
receive
the first deal in
post-Saddam Iraq (although it's
one negotiated with Hussein's
government before the war). The
Kurdish autonomous zone has
signed three PSAs -- none with
the majors -- although there is
some dispute about their
validity (and, at this writing,
there are reports that the Kurds
are
in negotiations with Royal
Dutch/Shell and BP, among
others).
At this point, the situation
is very fluid. Last week, Iraqis
were shocked when
a controversial measure that
might lead to the country's
effective breakup was passed by
Parliament by one vote. The
major Sunni parties and Muqtada
al Sadr's ministers boycotted
the vote in outrage. Muddying
the waters further is a heated
debate about whether a somewhat
ambiguous provision in the Iraqi
Constitution already gives
provincial governments the right
to hold on to oil revenues
rather than send them to the
central government. The results
of all of these debates will
have an enormous impact on
Iraq's chances to build an
autonomous and potentially
prosperous country down the
road.
It's possible that the
administration and its partners
badly overplayed their hand.
Iraq's new government stands on
the verge of a complete
meltdown, faced with a crisis of
legitimacy based largely on the
fact that it is seen as
collaborating with American
forces. Overwhelming majorities
of Iraqis of every sect believe
the United States is an
occupier, not a liberator, and
is convinced that it intends to
stay in Iraq permanently. "If
you go in front of Parliament,
Raed Jarrar told me, "and ask:
'who is opposed to demanding a
timetable for the Americans to
withdrawal?' nobody would dare
raise their hand." The passage
of a sweetheart oil law could
prove to be a tipping point.
It's also possible Iraq's
government won't make it to
December; at this writing,
rumors of a "palace coup" are
swirling around Baghdad,
according to Iraqi lawmakers.
What is clear is that the
future of Iraq ultimately hinges
to a great degree on the outcome
of a complex game of chess --
only part of which is out in the
open -- that is playing out
right now, and oil is at the
center of it. It's equally clear
that there's a yawning
disconnect between Iraqis' and
Americans' views of the
situation. Erik Leaver, a senior
analyst at the Institute for
Policy Studies in Washington,
told me that the disposition of
Iraq's oil wealth is "definitely
causing problems on the ground,"
but the entire topic is taboo in
polite D.C. circles. "Nobody in
Washington wants to talk about
it," he said. "They don't want
to sound like freaks talking
about blood for oil." At the
same time, a recent poll asked
Iraqis what they believed was
the main reason for the invasion
and 76 percent gave "to control
Iraqi oil" as their first
choice.
Joshua Holland is an
AlterNet staff writer.
Comment Guidelines
Be succinct, constructive and relevant to the story. We encourage engaging, diverse and meaningful commentary. Do not include personal information such as names, addresses, phone numbers and emails. Comments falling outside our guidelines – those including personal attacks and profanity – are not permitted.
See our complete Comment Policy and use this link to notify us if you have concerns about a comment. We’ll promptly review and remove any inappropriate postings.