Oil for Sale: Iraq Study
Group Recommends Privatization
By Antonia Juhasz
12/07/06 "Alternet" -- -- In its heavily anticipated
report released on Wednesday, the Iraq Study Group made
at least four truly radical proposals.
The report calls for the United States to assist in
privatizing Iraq's national oil industry, opening Iraq
to private foreign oil and energy companies, providing
direct technical assistance for the "drafting" of a new
national oil law for Iraq, and assuring that all of
Iraq's oil revenues accrue to the central government.
President Bush hired an employee from the U.S.
consultancy firm Bearing Point Inc. over a year ago to
advise the Iraq Oil Ministry on the drafting and passage
of a new national oil law. As previously drafted, the
law opens Iraq's nationalized oil sector to private
foreign corporate investment, but stops short of full
privatization. The ISG report, however, goes further,
stating that "the United States should assist Iraqi
leaders to reorganize the national oil industry as a
commercial enterprise." In addition, the current
Constitution of Iraq is ambiguous as to whether control
over Iraq's oil should be shared among its regional
provinces or held under the central government. The
report specifically recommends the latter: "Oil revenues
should accrue to the central government and be shared on
the basis of population." If these proposals are
followed, Iraq's national oil industry will be
privatized and opened to foreign firms, and in control
of all of Iraq's oil wealth.
The proposals should come as little surprise given that
two authors of the report, James A. Baker III and
Lawrence Eagleburger, have each spent much of their
political and corporate careers in pursuit of greater
access to Iraq's oil and wealth.
"Pragmatist" is the word most often used to describe
Iraq Study Group co-chair James A. Baker III. It is
equally appropriate for Lawrence Eagleburger. The term
applies particularly well to each man's efforts to
expand U.S. economic engagement with Saddam Hussein
throughout the 1980s and early 1990s. Not only did their
efforts enrich Hussein and U.S. corporations,
particularly oil companies, it also served the interests
of their own private firms.
On April 21,1990, a U.S. delegation was sent to Iraq to
placate Saddam Hussein as his anti-American rhetoric and
threats of a Kuwaiti invasion intensified. James A.
Baker III, then President George H.W. Bush's secretary
of state, personally sent a cable to the U.S embassy in
Baghdad instructing the U.S. ambassador to meet with
Hussein and to make clear that, "as concerned as we are
about Iraq's chemical, nuclear, and missile programs, we
are not in any sense preparing the way for preemptive
military unilateral effort to eliminate these
programs."*
Instead, Baker's interest was focused on trade, which he
described as the "central factor in the U.S-Iraq
relationship." From 1982, when Reagan removed Iraq from
the list of countries supporting terrorism, until August
1990, when Iraq invaded Kuwait, Baker and Eagleburger
worked with others in the Reagan and Bush
administrations to aggressively and successfully expand
this trade.
The efficacy of such a move may best be described in a
memo written in 1988 by the Bush transition team arguing
that the United States would have "to decide whether to
treat Iraq as a distasteful dictatorship to be shunned
where possible, or to recognize Iraq's present and
potential power in the region and accord it relatively
high priority. We strongly urge the latter view." Two
reasons offered were Iraq's "vast oil reserves," which
promised "a lucrative market for U.S. goods," and the
fact that U.S. oil imports from Iraq were skyrocketing.
Bush and Baker took the transition team's advice and ran
with it.
In fact, from 1983 to 1989, annual trade between the
United States and Iraq grew nearly sevenfold and was
expected to double in 1990, before Iraq invaded Kuwait.
In 1989, Iraq became the United States' second-largest
trading partner in the Middle East: Iraq purchased $5.2
billion in U.S. exports, while the U.S. bought $5.5
billion in Iraqi petroleum. From 1987 to July 1990, U.S.
imports of Iraqi oil increased from 80,000 to 1.1
million barrels per day.
Eagleburger and Baker had much to do with that
skyrocketing trade. In December 1983, then
undersecretary of state Eagleburger wrote the U.S.
Export-Import Bank to personally urge it to begin
extending loans to Iraq to "signal our belief in the
future viability of the Iraqi economy and secure a U.S.
foothold in a potentially large export market." He noted
that Iraq "has plans well advanced for an additional 50
percent increase in its oil exports by the end of 1984."
Ultimately, billions of loans would be made or backed by
the U.S. government to the Iraqi dictator, money used by
Hussein to purchase U.S. goods.
In 1984, Baker became treasury secretary, Reagan opened
full diplomatic relations with Iraq, and Eagleburger
became president of Henry Kissinger's corporate
consultancy firm, Kissinger Associates.
Kissinger Associates participated in the U.S.-Iraq
Business Forum through managing director Alan Stoga. The
Forum was a trade association representing some 60
American companies, including Bechtel, Lockheed, Texaco,
Exxon, Mobil, and Hunt Oil. The Iraqi ambassador to the
United States told a Washington, D.C., audience in 1985,
"Our people in Baghdad will give priority -- when there
is a competition between two companies -- to the one
that is a member of the Forum." Stoga appeared regularly
at Forum events and traveled to Iraq on a
Forum-sponsored trip in 1989 during which he met
directly with Hussein. Many Kissinger clients were also
members of the Forum and became recipients of contracts
with Hussein.
In 1989, Eagleburger returned to the state department
now under Secretary Baker. That same year, President
Bush signed National Security Directive 26 stating, "We
should pursue, and seek to facilitate, opportunities for
U.S. firms to participate in the reconstruction of the
Iraqi economy, particularly in the energy area."
The president then began discussions of a $1 billion
loan guarantee for Iraq one week before Secretary Baker
met with Tariq Aziz at the state department to seal the
deal.
But once Hussein invaded Kuwait, all bets were off.
Baker made a public plea for support of military action
against Hussein, arguing, "The economic lifeline of the
industrial world runs from the Gulf and we cannot permit
a dictator such as this to sit astride that economic
lifeline."
Baker had much to gain from increased access to Iraq's
oil. According to author Robert Bryce, Baker and his
immediate family's personal investments in the oil
industry at the time of the first Gulf War included
investments in Amoco, Exxon and Texaco. The family law
firm, Baker Botts, has represented Texaco, Exxon,
Halliburton and Conoco Phillips, among other companies,
in some cases since 1914 and in many cases for decades.
(Eagleburger is also connected to Halliburton, having
only recently departed the company's board of
directors). Baker is a longtime associate and now senior
partner of Baker Botts, which this year, for the second
year running, was recipient of "The International Who's
Who of Business Lawyers Oil & Gas Law Firm of the Year
Award," while the Middle East remains a central focus of
the firm.
This past July, U.S. Energy Secretary Bodman announced
in Baghdad that senior U.S. oil company executives would
not enter Iraq without passage of the new law. Petroleum
Economist magazine later reported that U.S. oil
companies put passage of the oil law before security
concerns as the deciding factor over their entry into
Iraq. Put simply, the oil companies are trying to get
what they were denied before the war or at anytime in
modern Iraqi history: access to Iraq's oil under the
ground. They are also trying to get the best deal
possible out of a war-ravaged and occupied nation.
However, waiting for the law's passage and the need to
guarantee security of U.S. firms once they get to work,
may well be a key factor driving the one proposal by the
Iraq Study Group that has received great media
attention: extending the presence of U.S. troops in Iraq
at least until 2008.
As the recommendations of the Iraq Study Group are more
thoroughly considered, we should remain ever vigilant
and wary of corporate war profiteers in pragmatist's
clothing.
*All quotes are referenced in my book, "The
Bush Agenda
."
Antonia Juhasz is a visiting scholar at the Institute
for Policy Studies, author of "The Bush Agenda: Invading
the World, One Economy at a Time," and a contributing
author, with John Perkins and others, of "A Game as Old
as Empire: The Secret World of Economic Hit Men and the
Web of Global Corruption."
www.TheBushAgenda.net.
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