01/18/07 "TomDispatch"
-- -- It has once again become
fashionable for the dwindling supporters of President
Bush's futile war in Iraq to stress the danger of "Islamo-fascism"
and the supposed drive by followers of Osama bin Laden
to establish a monolithic, Taliban-like regime -- a
"Caliphate" -- stretching from Gibraltar to Indonesia.
The President himself has employed this term on occasion
over the years, using it to
describe efforts by Muslim extremists to create "a
totalitarian empire that denies all political and
religious freedom." While there may indeed be hundreds,
even thousands, of disturbed and suicidal individuals
who share this delusional vision, the world actually
faces a far more substantial and universal threat, which
might be dubbed: Energo-fascism, or the militarization
of the global struggle over ever-diminishing supplies of
energy.
Unlike Islamo-fascism,
Energo-fascism will, in time, affect nearly every person
on the planet. Either we will be compelled to
participate in or finance foreign wars to secure vital
supplies of energy, such as the current conflict in
Iraq; or we will be at the mercy of those who control
the energy spigot, like the customers of the Russian
energy juggernaut
Gazprom in Ukraine, Belarus, and Georgia; or sooner
or later we may find ourselves under constant state
surveillance, lest we consume more than our allotted
share of fuel or engage in illicit energy transactions.
This is not simply some future dystopian nightmare, but
a potentially all-encompassing reality whose basic
features, largely unnoticed, are developing today.
These include:
* The transformation of the
U.S. military into a global oil protection service
whose primary mission is to defend America's overseas
sources of oil and natural gas, while patrolling the
world's major pipelines and supply routes.
* The transformation of
Russia into an energy superpower with control
over Eurasia's largest supplies of oil and natural gas
and the resolve to convert these assets into ever
increasing political influence over neighboring states.
* A ruthless scramble
among the great powers for the remaining oil, natural
gas, and uranium reserves of Africa, Latin America, the
Middle East, and Asia, accompanied by recurring military
interventions, the constant installation and replacement
of client regimes, systemic corruption and repression,
and the continued impoverishment of the great majority
of those who have the misfortune to inhabit such
energy-rich regions.
* Increased state
intrusion into, and surveillance of, public and private
life as reliance on nuclear power grows, bringing
with it an increased threat of sabotage, accident, and
the diversion of fissionable materials into the hands of
illicit nuclear proliferators.
Together, these and related
phenomena constitute the basic characteristics of an
emerging global Energo-fascism. Disparate as they may
seem, they all share a common feature: increasing state
involvement in the procurement, transportation, and
allocation of energy supplies, accompanied by a greater
inclination to employ force against those who resist the
state's priorities in these areas. As in classical
twentieth century fascism, the state will assume ever
greater control over all aspects of public and private
life in pursuit of what is said to be an essential
national interest: the acquisition of sufficient energy
to keep the economy functioning and public services
(including the military) running.
The Demand/Supply
Conundrum
Powerful, potentially
planet-altering trends like this do not occur in a
vacuum. The rise of Energo-fascism can be traced to two
overarching phenomena: an imminent collision between
energy demand and energy supplies, and the historic
migration of the center of gravity of planetary energy
output from the global north to the global south.
For the past 60 years, the
international energy industry has largely succeeded in
satisfying the world's ever-growing thirst for energy in
all its forms. When it comes to oil alone, global demand
jumped from 15 to 82 million barrels per day between
1955 and 2005, an increase of 450%. Global output rose
by a like amount in those years. Worldwide demand is
expected to keep growing at this rate, if not faster,
for years to come -- propelled in large part by rising
affluence in China, India, and other developing nations.
There is, however,
no expectation that global output can continue to
keep pace.
Quite the opposite: A
growing number of energy experts believe that the global
output of "conventional" (liquid) crude oil will soon
reach a peak --
perhaps as early as 2010 or 2015 -- and then begin an
irreversible decline. If this proves to be the case, no
amount of inputs from Canadian tar sands, shale oil, or
other "unconventional" sources will prevent a
catastrophic liquid-fuel shortage in a decade or so,
producing widespread economic trauma. The global supply
of other primary fuels, including natural gas, coal, and
uranium is not expected to contract as rapidly, but all
of these materials are finite, and will eventually
become scarce.
Coal is the most plentiful
of the three; if consumed at current rates, it can be
expected to last for perhaps another century and a half.
If, however, it is used to replace oil (in various
coal-to-liquid schemes), it will disappear much more
rapidly. This does not, of course, address coal's
disproportionate contribution to global warming; if
there is no change in the way it is burned in power
plants, the planet will become inhospitable long before
the last coal mine is exhausted.
Natural gas and uranium will
outlast petroleum by a decade or two, but they too will
eventually reach peak output and begin to decline.
Natural gas will simply disappear, just like oil; any
future scarcity of uranium can to some degree be
overcome through the greater utilization of "breeder
reactors," which produce plutonium as a byproduct; this
substance can, in turn, be used as a reactor fuel in its
own right. But any increased use of plutonium will also
vastly increase the risk of nuclear-weapons
proliferation, producing a far more dangerous world and
a corresponding requirement for greater government
oversight of all aspects of nuclear power and commerce.
Such future possibilities
are generating great anxiety among officials of the
major energy-consuming nations, especially the United
States, China, Japan, and the European powers. All of
these countries have undertaken major reviews of energy
policy in recent years, and all have come to the same
conclusion: Market forces alone can no longer be relied
upon to satisfy essential national energy requirements,
and so the state must assume ever-increasing
responsibility for performing this role. This was, for
example, the fundamental conclusion of the
National
Energy Policy adopted by the Bush administration on
May 17, 2001 and followed slavishly ever since, just as
it is the official stance of China's Communist regime.
When resistance to such efforts is encountered,
moreover, government officials only wield the power of
the state more regularly and with a heavier hand to
achieve their objectives, whether through trade
sanctions, embargoes, arrests and seizures, or the
outright use of force. This is part of the explanation
for Energo-fascism's emergence.
Its rise is also being
driven by the changing geography of energy production.
At one time, most of the world's major oil and natural
gas wells were located in North America, Europe, and the
European sectors of the Russian Empire. This was no
accident. The major energy companies much preferred to
operate in hospitable countries that were close at hand,
relatively stable, and disinclined to nationalize
private energy deposits. But these deposits have now
largely been depleted and the only areas still capable
of satisfying rising world demand are located in Africa,
Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East.
The countries in these
regions were nearly all subject to colonial rule and
still harbor deep distrust of foreign involvement; many
also house ethnic separatist groups, insurgencies, or
extremist movements that make them especially
inhospitable to foreign oil companies.
Oil production in Nigeria, for example, has been
sharply curtailed in recent months by an
insurgency in the impoverished Niger Delta. Members
of poor tribal groups that have suffered terribly from
the environmental devastation wrought by oil-company
operations in their midst, while receiving few tangible
benefits from the resulting oil revenues, have led it;
most of the profits that remain in-country are pilfered
by ruling elites in Abuja, the capital. Combine this
sort of local resentment with lack of security and often
shaky ruling groups, and it's hardly surprising that the
leaders of the major consuming nations have increasingly
been taking matters into their own hands -- arranging
preemptive oil deals with compliant local officials and
providing military protection, where needed, to ensure
the safe delivery of oil and natural gas.
In many cases, this has
resulted in the establishment of oil-driven,
patron-client relations between major consuming nations
and their leading suppliers, similar to the
long-established U.S. protectorate over Saudi Arabia and
the more recent U.S. embrace of
Ilham Aliyev, the president of Azerbaijan. Already
we have the beginnings of the energy equivalent of a
classic arms race, combined with many of the elements of
the "Great Game" as once played by colonial powers in
some of the same parts of the world. By militarizing the
energy policies of consuming nations and enhancing the
repressive capacities of client regimes, the foundations
are being laid for an Energo-fascist world.
The Pentagon: A Global
Oil-Protection Service
The most significant
expression of this trend has been the transformation of
the U.S. military into a
global oil-protection service whose primary function
is the guarding of overseas energy supplies as well as
their global delivery systems (pipelines, tanker ships,
and supply routes). This overarching mission was first
articulated by President Jimmy Carter in January 1980,
when he described the oil flow from the Persian Gulf as
a "vital interest" of the United States, and affirmed
that this country would employ "any means necessary,
including military force" to overcome an attempt by a
hostile power to block that flow.
When President Carter issued
this edict, quickly dubbed the
Carter Doctrine, the United States did not actually
possess any forces capable of performing this role in
the Gulf. To fill this gap, Carter created a new entity,
the
Rapid Deployment Joint Task Force (RDJTF), an ad
hoc assortment of U.S-based forces designated for
possible employment in the Middle East. In 1983,
President Reagan transformed the RDJTF into the
Central Command
(Centcom), the name it bears today. Centcom exercises
command authority over all U.S. combat forces deployed
in the greater Persian Gulf area including Afghanistan
and the Horn of Africa. At present, Centcom is largely
preoccupied with the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, but
it has never given up its original role of
guarding the oil flow from the Persian Gulf in
accordance with the Carter Doctrine.
The greatest danger to the
Persian Gulf oil flow is now said to emanate from
Iran, which has threatened to choke off all oil
shipments through the vital Strait of Hormuz (the narrow
passageway at the mouth of the Gulf) in the event of an
American air assault on its nuclear facilities. In
possible anticipation of such a move, the Pentagon
recently ordered additional air and naval forces into
the Gulf and replaced
General John Abizaid, the Centcom Commander, who
favored diplomatic engagement with Iran and Syria, with
Admiral William Fallon, the Commander of the Pacific
Command (Pacom) and an expert in combined air and naval
operations.
Fallon arrived at Centcom just as President Bush, in
a nationally televised
speech on January 10, announced the deployment of an
additional
carrier battle group to the Gulf and warned of harsh
military action against Iran if it failed to halt its
support for insurgents in Iraq and its pursuit of
uranium-enrichment technology.
When first promulgated in
1980, the Carter Doctrine was aimed principally at the
Persian Gulf and surrounding waters. In recent years,
however, American policymakers have concluded that the
United States must extend this kind of protection to
every major oil-producing region in the developing
world. The logic for a Carter Doctrine on a global scale
was first spelled out in a bipartisan task force report,
"The Geopolitics of Energy," published by the
Washington-based Center
for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in
November 2000. Because the United States and its allies
are becoming increasingly dependent on energy supplies
from unstable overseas suppliers, the report concluded,
"[T]he geopolitical risks attendant to energy
availability are not likely to abate." Under these
circumstances, "the United States, as the world's only
superpower, must accept its special responsibilities for
preserving access to worldwide energy supply."
This sort of thinking --
embraced by senior Democrats and Republicans alike --
appears to have governed American strategic thinking
since the late 1990s. It was President Clinton who first
put this policy into effect, by extending the Carter
Doctrine to the Caspian Sea basin. It was Clinton who
originally declared that the flow of oil and gas from
the Caspian Sea to the West was an American security
priority, and who, on this basis, established military
ties with the governments of Azerbaijan, Georgia,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan. President Bush
has substantially upgraded these ties -- thereby laying
the groundwork for a permanent U.S. military presence in
the region -- but it is important to view this as a
bipartisan effort in accordance with a shared belief
that protection of the global oil flow is increasingly
not just a vital function, but the vital function
of the American military.
More recently, President
Bush has extended the reach of the Carter Doctrine to
West Africa, now one of America's major sources of oil.
Particular emphasis is being placed on Nigeria, where
unrest in the Delta (which holds most of the country's
onshore petroleum fields) has produced a substantial
decline in oil output. "Nigeria is the fifth largest
source of U.S. oil imports," the State Department's
Fiscal Year 2007 Congressional Budget Justification
for Foreign Operations declares, "and disruption of
supply from Nigeria would represent a major blow to U.S.
oil security strategy." To prevent such a disruption,
the Department of Defense is providing Nigerian military
and internal security forces with substantial arms and
equipment intended to quell unrest in the Delta region;
the Pentagon is also
collaborating with Nigerian forces in a number of
regional patrol and surveillance efforts aimed at
improving security in the Gulf of Guinea, where most of
West Africa's offshore oil and gas fields are located.
Of course, senior officials
and foreign policy elites are generally loath to
acknowledge such crass motivations for the utilization
of military force -- they much prefer to talk about
spreading democracy and fighting terrorism. Every once
in a while, however, a hint of this deep energy-based
conviction rises to the surface. Especially revealing is
a November 2006 task force report from the
Council on Foreign
Relations on
"National Security Consequences of U.S. Oil Dependency."
Co-chaired by former Secretary of Defense James R.
Schlesinger and former CIA Director John Deutsch, and
endorsed by a slew of elite policy wonks from both
parties, the report trumpeted the usual to-be-ignored
calls for energy efficiency and conservation at home,
but then struck just the militaristic note first voiced
in the 2000 CSIS report (which Schlesinger also
co-chaired): "Several standard operations of U.S.
regionally deployed forces [presumably Centcom and
Pacom] have made important contributions to improving
energy security, and the continuation of such efforts
will be necessary in the future. U.S. naval protection
of the sea-lanes that transport oil is of paramount
importance." The report also called for stepped up U.S.
naval engagement in the Gulf of Guinea off the coast of
Nigeria.
When expressing such views,
U.S. policymakers often adopt an altruistic stance,
claiming that the United States is performing a "social
good" by protecting the global oil flow on behalf of the
world community. But this haughty, altruistic posture
ignores crucial aspects of the situation:
* First, the United States
is the world's leading gas guzzler, accounting for one
out of every four barrels of oil consumed daily around
the world.
* Second, the pipelines and
sea lanes being protected by American soldiers and
sailors at risk of life and limb are largely those
oriented toward the United States and close allies like
Japan and the NATO countries.
* Third, it is often
specifically American-based corporations whose overseas
operations are being protected by U.S. forces in
turbulent areas abroad, again at significant risk to the
military personnel involved.
* Fourth, the Pentagon is
itself one of the world's great oil guzzlers, consuming
134 million barrels of oil in 2005, as much as the
entire nation of Sweden.
So while it is true that
other countries may obtain some benefits from the
activities of the American military, the primary
beneficiaries are the American economy and giant U.S.
corporations; the primary losers are the American
soldiers who risk their lives every day to protect the
pipelines and refineries, the poor of these countries
who see little or no benefit from the extraction of
their natural resources, and the global environment as a
whole.
The cost of this immense
undertaking, in both blood and treasure, is enormous and
it's still on the rise. There is, first of all, the war
in Iraq, which may have been sparked by a variety of
motives, but cannot in the end be separated from the
historic mission first laid out by President Carter of
eliminating any potential threat to the free flow of oil
from the Persian Gulf. An assault on Iran would also
have a number of motives, but it, too, would be tied to
this mission in the final analysis -- even if it had the
perverse effect of closing off oil supplies, driving up
energy prices, and throwing the global economy into a
tailspin. And there are sure to be more wars over oil
after these, with more American casualties and more
victims of American missiles and bullets.
The cost in dollars will
also be great. Even if the war in Iraq is excluded from
the tally, the United States spends about one-fourth of
its defense budget, or some $100 billion per year, on
Persian Gulf-related expenses -- the approximate annual
price-tag for enforcement of the Carter Doctrine. One
can argue about what percentage of the approximately
$1
trillion cost of the war in Iraq should be added to
this tally, but surely we are minimally talking about
many hundreds of billions of dollars with no end in
sight. Protection of pipelines and tanker routes in the
Indian Ocean, the Pacific, the Gulf of Guinea, Colombia,
and the Caspian Sea region adds additional billions to
this figure.
These costs will snowball in
the future as the United States becomes predictably more
dependent on energy from the global south, as resistance
to Western exploitation of its oil fields grows, as an
energy race with newly ascendant China and India revs
up, and as American foreign-policy elites come to rely
increasingly on the U.S. military to overcome this
resistance. Eventually, the escalation of these costs
will require higher domestic taxes or diminished social
benefits, or both; at some point, the growing need for
manpower to guard all these overseas oil fields,
refineries, pipelines, and tanker routes could entail
resumption of the military draft. This will generate
widespread resistance to these policies at home -- and
this, in turn, may trigger the sorts of repressive
government crackdowns that would throw an ever darkening
shadow of Energo-fascism over our world.
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