Andy Rowell, 9 December 2004
Arabic version here
If the Iraqi election goes ahead next month as planned nowhere will it be more closely watched than in the boardrooms of the oil industry. From Houston, The Hague, and London, senior oil executives are expecting the election to give them access to the world’s second largest reserves of oil. It has been a thirty-year wait for the likes of Exxon, Shell and BP to gain access to reserves nationalised by Saddam Hussein. So Iraqis may vote for a new government but it is the oilmen who will walk off with the real prize.
With democracy will come the spoils of war. Many
businesses are set to join the Iraqi bonanza. “No country in the region has
more business-generating potential than Iraq”, states the Rebuild Iraq 2005
conference brochure, set to be held in Jordan next April. “Soaring demand for
materials and technology in key sectors for the Iraqi economy may well exceed
$150 billion in the long-term. In the medium term, $60-70 billion will be
needed to rebuild the country”.
A denial of history
But whilst there will be money to be made rebuilding
Iraq’s infrastructure destroyed by fourteen years of sanctions and nearly two
years of war, oil is the real jewel in Iraq’s crown. It is also the reason that
many people believe America and Britain went to war. It is the rumour that Bush
and Blair have long tried to dispel. “The idea that this is about oil for us is
absurd. If all we wanted was greater oil supplies we could probably do a deal
with Iraq or any other country on that basis,” argued Tony Blair on the Arabic
service of Monte Carlo Radio in November 2002.
Speaking a month later, Donald Rumsfeld was asked whether
the war was about oil: “It just isn't”, he replied. “There--there--there are
certain things like that, myths that are floating around. I'm glad you asked.
I--it has nothing to do with oil, literally nothing to do with oil”.
To deny that oil is even in the equation of Middle Eastern
politics represents nothing more than a denial of history itself. Oil may not
have been the only factor in the War, but it was clearly in the equation. “Ask any oil executive in Texas about the
real reason for Bush and Cheney's determination to overthrow Saddam Hussein and
they will laugh. Oil, oil, oil is the reason, weapons of mass destruction are
just a smokescreen”, said one leading oil and gas analyst interviewed by The Middle East journal, the same month
as Blair’s broadcast in 2002.
For most of the last century, the geopolitics of the vast
oil reserves of the Middle East have dominated the political landscape of the
region. The colonising powers have long sought to control the reserves. During
the First World War, in 1917, control of Iraqi oil reserves was considered a
“first-class British war aim”. By 1925, the Iraqi government was forced to sign
an agreement granting a concession to explore oil until 2000. It decreed that
the company would remain British and its chairman would remain British. The
fact that Iraqis were going to just receive royalties for their oil and not own
it sowed the seeds of bitterness against the colonial powers for decades to
come.
A target for the neo-cons
It was in 1972 that Iraqis nationalised the oil industry.
The Arab Ba’ath Socialist Party, that Saddam Hussein headed, considered
“liberating oil from the clutches of monopolistic companies” a “top priority”.
Such was its importance that nationalisation was celebrated every year. It also
made Hussein a target for the neo-conservatives in Washington, who now form the
backbone of the Bush Administration, and who are linked to the oil industry.
On January 26 1998, the Project for the New American
Century formed by hawkish right-wingers like Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, and
Paul Wolfowitz, who would all take up senior positions in the Bush government,
wrote to the then President Bill Clinton, urging "the removal of Saddam
Hussein's regime from power". If Clinton failed to act, “the safety of
American troops in the region, of our friends and allies like Israel and the
moderate Arab states, and a significant portion of the world's supply of oil
will all be put at hazard”. Three years before the terrorist attacks of
September 11th, Saddam was already a marked man.
The last great oil boom
Blair and Bush went to war to rid Saddam of his
non-existent weapons of mass destruction, whilst promising Iraqi that oil would
stay with the Iraqis. “The money from Iraqi oil will be yours; to be used to
build prosperity for you and your families,” said Blair in April 2003. But despite the promises, many of the world’s
largest and most powerful oil companies have been in secret negotiations with
the Iraqis to exploit the oil. To these oil companies, who are being forced
into ever more remote regions to find oil, and who are beginning to alarm city
investors by missing production targets, Iraq offers the last great oil boom.
So far the deals have been small, although still highly
important. But the really significant production deals will not be signed until
after the election, as any agreement before then could be open to a legal
challenge as the government is seen by some as illegitimate and only an
“interim” one.
“The important thing is what happens after the election”,
says Greg Muttitt, an analyst at Platform, a research group specialising in the
environmental and social impacts of the oil industry, based in London. “In
relation to that the western majors have been positioning themselves in terms
of getting hold of geological data and also developing relationships with the
Iraqi oil Ministry”.
There have been indications of what is to come. In June
2004 a respected survey of “New Ventures” for oil companies ranked Iraq third
out of 147 countries for level of interest expressed by oil executives.
These same oil executives have tried to distance
themselves from being publicly linked to Iraq.
In August, the recruitment company Irvine International
ran an advert on behalf of a client. “A person of Iraqi extraction with strong
family connections and an insight into the network of families of significance
within Iraq would be extremely desirable for this position” ran the advert. The
client was of course hidden. It was for Shell.
In October Shell secured the “rare prize” to consult the
Iraqis on gas fields. The deal was all about building relationships and gaining
strategic access to key data. “It's impossible to invest there now for a
variety of reasons, but we hope to build relationships through this
initiative”, Piet Ruijtenberg, Iraq project manager for Shell Exploration and
Production was quoted in the press. The deal led to speculation that it would
improve Shell’s chances of developing the huge Ratawi field near Basra.
Then last month it was announced five companies had been
shortlisted to evaluate the potential of the huge Kirkuk field in the north of
Iraq. A similar number were shortlisted for the Rumaila oilfields in the south.
“I hope we will award the contracts for both projects within a month”, Hazim
Sultan, Iraq's oilfield development director told the Reuters news agency.
When the election is over, many of the world’s largest oil
companies will be in a position to exploit Iraqi oil – not for Iraqis, but for
their shareholders thousands of miles away. “Behind closed doors the future
structure of the Iraqi oil ministry is being mapped out” argues Platform’s Greg
Muttitt. “What the Iraqi Interim government is setting up is a structure where
all of the new fields in the Western desert, which could be huge, all of those
will go to western companies. The state oil company will be part-privatised.
When Tony Blair says that decisions on Iraqi oil will be made by Iraqis, what
he means is that the decisions on Iraqi oil will be made by Iraqis who want to
give the oil reserves to the western companies”.
For the oilmen, the election cannot come soon enough.
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