OPEC AND THE ECONOMIC
CONQUEST OF IRAQ:
Why Iraq Still Sells Its Oil à la Cartel +
Twilight of the Neocon Gods
By Greg Palast
(On October 22, 2005, Greg Palast and his co-author, the
Rev. Jesse Jackson, received a Project Censored award, the "alternative Pulitzer
Prize," for their report, JIM CROW RETURNS TO THE VOTING BOOTH: DOES AMERICA
HAVE AN APARTHEID VOTE-COUNTING SYSTEM? The Palast investigative team received a
second award for uncovering the State Department's confidential pre-war plans
for the economic con-quest of Iraq. By special arrangement with
Harper's Magazine, we are reproducing here for the first time the entire updated article
on the US government's secret schemes for seizing control of the oil fields of
Iraq)
TWO AND A HALF YEARS AND $202 BILLION into the war in
Iraq, the United
States has at least one significant new asset to show for it: effective
membership, through our control of Iraq's energy policy, in the Organization
of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), the Arab-dominated oil
cartel.
Just what to do with this proxy power has been, almost since President
Bush's first inaugural, the cause of a pitched battle between neoconservatives
at the Pentagon, on the one hand, and the State Department and the
oil industry, on the other. At issue is whether Iraq will remain a
member in good standing of OPEC, upholding production limits and thereby
high prices, or a mutinous spoiler that could topple the Arab oligopoly.
According to insiders and to documents obtained from the State Department,
the neo-cons, once in command, are now in full retreat. Iraq's system
of oil production, after a year of failed free-market experimentation,
is being re-created almost entirely on the lines originally laid out
by Saddam Hussein.
Under the quiet direction of U.S. oil company executives working with
the State Department, the Iraqis have discarded the neo-con vision
of a laissez faire, privatized oil operation in favor of one shackled
to quotas set by OPEC, which have been key to the 148% rise in oil
prices since the beginning of 2002. This rise is estimated to have
cost the U.S. economy 1.5% of its GDP, or a third of its total growth
during the period.
Given this economic blow, and given that OPEC states account for 46%
of America's oil imports, it may seem odd that the United States'
"remaking" of Iraq would allow for a national oil company that props
up OPEC's price gouging. And in fact the original scheme for reconstruction,
at least the one favored by neoconservatives, was to privatize Iraq's
oil entirely and thereby undermine the oil cartel. One intellectual
godfather of this strategy was Ariel Cohen of the Heritage Foundation,
who in September 2002 published (with Gerald P. O'Driscoll, Jr.) a
post-invasion plan, "The Road to Economic Prosperity for a Post-Saddam
Iraq," that put forward the idea of using Iraq to smash OPEC. Cohen
explained to me how such an extraordinary geopolitical feat might
be accomplished. OPEC maintains high oil prices by suppressing production
through a quota system effectively imposed on each member by Saudi
Arabia, which reigns by dint of its overwhelming reserves. The Saudis,
to maintain their control on pricing, must keep a lid on production
from other members-particularly Iraq, which has the second greatest
proven reserves.
Under Saddam Hussein, Iraq adhered to the OPEC quota limit (historically
set to equal Iran's, now 3.96 million barrels a day) via state ownership
of all fields. Cohen reasoned that if Iraq's fields were broken up
and sold off, a dozen competing operators would quickly crank up production
from their individual patches to the maximum possible, swiftly raising
Iraq's total output to 6 million barrels a day. This extra crude would
flood world petroleum markets, OPEC would devolve into mass cheating
and overproduction, oil prices would fall over a cliff, and Saudi
Arabia-both economically and politically - would fall to its knees.
By February 2003, Cohen's position had been enshrined as official
policy, in the form of a hundred-page blueprint for the occupied nation
titled, "Moving the Iraqi Economy from Recovery to Sustainable Growth"-a
plan that generally embodied the principles for postwar Iraq favored
by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Deputy Secretary Paul Wolfowitz,
and the Iran-Contra figure Elliott Abrams, now Deputy National Security
Adviser. Nominally written by a committee of Defense, State, and Treasury
officials, the blueprint was in fact the brainchild of a platoon of
corporate lobbyists, chief among them the flat tax fanatic Grover Norquist.
From overhauling tax rates to rewriting copyright law, the document
mapped out a radical makeover of Iraq as a free-market Xanadu-a sort
of Chile on the Tigris-including, on page 73, the sell-off of the
nation's crown jewels: "privatization... [of] the oil and supporting
industries."
Following the U.S. military's swift advance to Baghdad, those skeptical
of the neo-con plan were summarily brushed aside. Chief among the castoffs
was General Jay Garner, the short-lived occupation viceroy who on the
very night he arrived in Baghdad from Kuwait received a call from
Rumsfeld informing him of his dismissal. When I met with Garner last
March at the Washington offices of L3 Corporation's giant security
subsidiary he now heads, the general told me that he had resisted
imposing on Iraqis the plan's sell-off of assets, especially the oil.
"That's just one fight you don't have to take on right now," he said.
"You don't want to end the day with more enemies than you started
with."
In plotting the destruction of OPEC, the neo-cons failed to predict
the virulent resistance of insurgent forces: the U.S. oil industry
itself. From the outset of the planning for war, U.S. oil executives
had thrown in their lot with the pragmatists at the State Department
and the National Security Council. Within weeks of the first inaugural,
prominent Iraqi expatriates-many with ties to U.S. industry-were invited
to secret discussions directed by Pamela Quanrud, an NSC economics
expert now employed at State. "It quickly became an oil group," one
participant, Falah Aljibury, told me. Aljibury, an adviser to Amerada
Hess's oil trading arm and to investment banking giant Goldman Sachs,
who once served as a back channel between the United States and Iraq
during the Reagan and George H. W. Bush administrations, cut ties
to the Hussein regime following the invasion of Kuwait.
The working group's ideas about the war had been far less starry-eyed
than those of the neo-cons. "The petroleum industry, the chemical industry,
the banking industry-they'd hoped that Iraq would go for a revolution
like in the past and government was shut down for two or three days,"
Aljibury told me. "You have a martial law . . . and say Iraq is being
liberated and everybody stay where they are . . . Everything as is."
On this plan, Hussein would simply have been replaced by some former
Baathist general. One candidate was General Nizar Khazraji, Saddam's
former army chief of staff, who at the time was under house arrest
in Denmark pending charges for war crimes. (Khazraji was seen in Iraq
a month after the U.S. invasion, but he soon disappeared and has not
been heard from since.)
Roughly six months before the invasion, the Bush Administration designated
Philip Carroll to advise the Iraqi Oil Ministry once U.S. tanks entered
Baghdad. Carroll had been CEO of both Fluor Corporation, now a major
contractor in Iraq, and, earlier, of Royal Dutch/Shell's U.S. division.
In May 2003, a month after his arrival in Iraq, Carroll made headlines
when he told the Washington Post that Iraq might break with OPEC:
"[Iraqis] have from time to time, because of compelling national interest,
elected to opt out of the quota system and pursue their own path.
. . . They may elect to do that same thing. To me, it's a very important
national question." Carroll later told me, though, that he personally
would not have been supportive of privatizing oil fields. "Nobody
in their right mind would have thought of doing that," he said.
Soon after Carroll resigned his post in September 2003, the new provisional
government appointed an oil minister, Ibrahim Bahr al-Uloum. Uloum
(who had been maneuvered into the job by then-neo-con favorite Ahmad
Chalabi) quickly fired Muhammad al-Jiburi, chief of Iraq's State Oil
Marketing Organization, and Thamer Ghadhban, the expert in charge
of the southern oil fields, both of whom had been trusted by the Western
oil industry. Production faltered from a combination of incompetence,
wholesale theft (Iraq's oil was unmetered), sabotage, and corruption
that one oilman told me was "rampant," with "direct payoffs to government
officials by commercial operators."
With pipelines exploding daily, the fantasy of remaking Iraq's oil
industry also went up in flames. Carroll was replaced by another Houston
oil chieftain, Rob McKee, a former executive vice-president of ConocoPhillips
and currently the chairman-even during his tenure in Baghdad-of Enventure,
an oil-drilling supply subsidiary of the Halliburton Corporation.
McKee had little tolerance for the neo-cons' threat to privatize the
oil fields. A close associate of McKee's and the executive adviser
to Hess's trading arm, Ed Morse, told me that "Rob was very promotive
of putting in place a really strong national oil company," even if
he had to act over the objections of the Iraqi Governing Council.
Morse, who says he takes as many as six calls a day from the Bush
Administration regarding Iraq, is one of the men to whom Washington
turns to obtain the views of Big Oil. Like Carroll and McKee, Morse
sneers at what he calls "the obsession of neo-conservative writers
on ways to undermine OPEC." Iraqis, says Morse, know that if they
pump 6 million barrels a day, i.e., 2 million above their expected
OPEC quota, "they will crash the oil market" and bring down their
own economy.
In November 2003, McKee quietly ordered up a new plan for Iraq's oil.
The drafting would be overseen by a "senior adviser," Amy Jaffe, who
had worked for Morse when he held the formidable title of Chairman
of the Council on Foreign Relations-James Baker III Institute Joint
Committee on Petroleum Security. Jaffe now works for Baker, the former
Secretary of State, whose law firm serves as counsel to both ExxonMobil
and the defense minister of Saudi Arabia. The plan, nominally written
by State Department contractor BearingPoint, was guided, says Jaffe,
by a handful of oil industry consultants and executives.
For months, the State Department officially denied the existence of
this 323-page plan for Iraq's oil, but when I identified the document's
title from my sources and threatened legal action, I was able to obtain
the complete report, dated December 2003 and entitled "Options for
Developing a Long Term Sustainable Iraqi Oil Industry." The multi-volume
document describes seven possible models of oil production for Iraq,
each one merely a different flavor of a single option: the creation
of a state-owned oil company. The seven options ranged from the Saudi
Aramco model, in which the government owns the whole operation from
reserves to pipelines, to the Azerbaijan model, in which the state-owned
assets are operated almost entirely by "IOCs" (International Oil Companies).
The drafters had little regard for the "self-financing" system, such
as Saudi Arabia's, which bars IOCs from the fields; they prefer the
production-sharing agreement (PSA) model, under which the state maintains
official title to the reserves but operation and control are given
to foreign oil companies. These companies then manage, fund, and equip
crude extraction in exchange for a percentage of sales receipts.
While promoting IOC control of the fields, the authors take care to
warn the Iraqi government against attempting to squeeze IOC profits:
"Countries that do not offer risk-adjusted rates of return equal to
or above other nations will be unlikely to achieve significant levels
of investment, regardless of the richness of their geology." Indeed,
to outbid other nations for Big Oil's favor will require Iraq to turn
over quite a large share of profits, especially when competing against
countries such as Azerbaijan that have given away the store. The Azeri
government, notes the report, has "been able to partially overcome
their risk profile and attract billions of dollars of investment by
offering a contractual balance of commercial interests within the
risk contract." This refers to the fact that Azerbaijan, despite its
poor oil quality and poor location, drew in the IOCs via scandalous
splits of revenue allowed by the nation's corrupt government.
Given how easily the interests of OPEC and those of the IOCs can be
aligned, it is certainly understandable why smashing the oil cartel
would not strike oilmen as a good idea. In 2004, with oil approaching
the $50-a-barrel mark all year, the major U.S. oil companies posted
record or near record profits. ConocoPhillips, Rob McKee's company,
this February reported a doubling of its quarterly profits from the
previous year, which itself had been a company record; Carroll's former
employer, Shell, posted a record-breaking $4.48 billion in fourth-quarter
earnings. ExxonMobil last year reported the largest one-year operating
profit of any corporation in U.S. history.
When I talked to Ariel Cohen at Heritage, his dream of smashing OPEC
in shambles, he blamed the State Department for acquiescing to the
Saudis and to Russia, which also benefit s from selling oil at high
OPEC prices. The poisonous policies were influenced, he said, by "Arab
economists hired by the State Department who are basically supporting
the witches' brew of the Saudi royal family and the Soviet ostblock
. . . because the Saudis are interested in maximizing their market
share and they're not interested in fast growth of the Iraqi output."
According to Morse, the switch to an OPEC-friendly policy for Iraq
was driven by Dick Cheney himself. "The person who is most influential
in running American energy policy is the Vice President," who, says
Morse, "thinks that security begins by . . . letting prices follow
wherever they may."
Even, I asked, if those are artificially high prices, set by OPEC?
"The VP's office [has] not pursued a policy in Iraq that would lead
to a rapid opening of the Iraqi energy sector . . . so they have not
done anything, either with producers or energy policy, that would
put us on a track to say, 'We're going to put a squeeze on OPEC.'"
Opposition to OPEC was handled in a style that would have made Saddam
proud. On May 20, 2004, Iraqi police raided Ahmad Chalabi's home in
Baghdad and carted away his computers and files. Chalabi was hunted
by his own government: the charge was espionage, no less, for Iran.
Chalabi's Governing Council was soon shut down and, crucially, Bahr
al-Uloum was yanked from the Oil Ministry and replaced by the very
men he had removed: Thamer Ghadhban, who took al-Uloum's job at the
oil ministry and Chalabi rival Muhammad al-Jiburi who was made minister
of trade.
But just when you thought the fat lady sang for the neo-cons, who
should rise from his crypt eight months later but Ahmad Chalabi. In
January 2005, Chalabi cut a deal with his former oil minister's father,
a Shia power broker, and rode that religious ethnic vote back into
office. Chalabi landed himself the post of Second Deputy Prime Minister
and, in addition, the tantalizing title of interim oil minister. The
espionage investigation was dropped; the King of Jordan offered to
pardon Chalabi for the $72 million missing from Chalabi's former bank;
and Chalabi once again turned over his oil ministry to Sheik al-Uloum's
son. The Texans' OPEC man Ghadhban, was again kicked downstairs.
But Chalabi had learned his lesson: don't mess with Texas, or the
Texan's favorite cartel. A chastened Chalabi now endorses Iraq's cooperation
with OPEC's fleecing of the planet's oil consumers.
And Dick Cheney, far from "putting the squeeze on OPEC," has taken
his de facto seat there, assenting by silence to the oil monopoly's
piratical price gouging. But hasn't OPEC's stratospheric crude prices
choked the life out of America's auto industry and bankrupted half
a dozen airlines? In the Vice-President's bunker the elimination of
jobs of Democratic-leaning union members is likely seen as a bonus
for the good deed of boosting oil industry profits far above the ozone
layer.
[Greg Palast is the author of the New York Times bestseller, The Best Democracy Money Can Buy. This is his fourth investigative report for Harper's Magazine. Leni von Eckardt was chief researcher with Palast on this project. This is the Palast team's fifth Project Censored Award from California State University's school of journalism. The BBC Television Newsnight broadcast of this story was produced by Meirion Jones. View the BBC report and sign up for Palast's investigation updates at: <http://www.GregPalast.com>]