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New Its about the oil
[link|http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/03/30/201/|http://www.commondre...e/2007/03/30/201/]

He threatens a veto, but he might well be bluffing. Buried deep in the legislation and intentionally obscured is a near-guarantee of success for the Bush Administration\ufffds true objective of the war-capturing Iraq\ufffds oil-and George Bush will not casually forego that.

This bizarre circumstance is the end-game of the brilliant, ever-deceitful maneuvering by the Bush Administration in conducting the entire scenario of the \ufffdglobal war on terror.\ufffd

The supplemental appropriation package requires the Iraqi government to meet a series of \ufffdbenchmarks\ufffd President Bush established in his speech to the nation on January 10 (in which he made his case for the \ufffdsurge\ufffd). Most of Mr. Bush\ufffds benchmarks are designed to blame the victim, forcing the Iraqis to solve the problems George Bush himself created.

One of the President\ufffds benchmarks, however, stands apart. This is how the President described it: \ufffdTo give every Iraqi citizen a stake in the country\ufffds economy, Iraq will pass legislation to share oil revenues among all Iraqis.\ufffd A seemingly decent, even noble concession. That\ufffds all Mr. Bush said about that benchmark, but his brevity was gravely misleading, and it had to be intentional.

The Iraqi Parliament has before it today, in fact, a bill called the hydrocarbon law, and it does call for revenue sharing among Sunnis, Shiites, and Kurds. For President Bush, this is a must-have law, and it is the only \ufffdbenchmark\ufffd that truly matters to his Administration.

Yes, revenue sharing is there-essentially in fine print, essentially trivial. The bill is long and complex, it has been years in the making, and its primary purpose is transformational in scope: a radical and wholesale reconstruction-virtual privatization-of the currently nationalized Iraqi oil industry.

If passed, the law will make available to Exxon/Mobil, Chevron/Texaco, BP/Amoco, and Royal Dutch/Shell about 4/5\ufffds of the stupendous petroleum reserves in Iraq.
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Evil. Of course, it won't mean a whole lot if the unsurgents keep blowing up the infrastructure. Like winning a pile of gold on the moon. Just try to collect.



I4 NOW!


Impeach, Indict, Incarcerate, Inject
Bush, Cheney, Gonzalez, Rumsfeld, Rove, Rice
New ??? Sort of like Alaska?
I don't see anything pointing to removing control from the gov't. Only the forcing that the revenue NOT be horded by the gov't.
Too much of today's music is fashionable crap dressed as artistry.Adrian Belew
New Sounds more like a record contract
About as equitable. Like they consulted the RIAA or something.



I4 NOW!


Impeach, Indict, Incarcerate, Inject
Bush, Cheney, Gonzalez, Rumsfeld, Rove, Rice
Expand Edited by tuberculosis March 31, 2007, 12:58:12 PM EDT
New Re: ??? Sort of like Alaska?
I don't see anything pointing to removing control from the gov't. Only the forcing that the revenue NOT be horded by the gov't.

I have not seen the final draft, but in at least one version the oil contracts would be negotiated, signed, and regulated by a special government oversight board. Which would have 3 oil company officials selected by the oil companies and 2 government officials on it, majority rules.

Jay
New Not that different from before then
as at that time I was working for a company that had most of the contracts for the northern fields.
Too much of today's music is fashionable crap dressed as artistry.Adrian Belew
New thats different :-)
Any opinions expressed by me are mine alone, posted from my home computer, on my own time as a free american and do not reflect the opinions of any person or company that I have had professional relations with in the past 51 years. meep

reach me at [link|mailto:bill.oxley@cox.net|mailto:bill.oxley@cox.net]
New Don't take this the wrong way
But, if you are a pessimist and after watching the way the Iraqi occupation has helped the Iraqis, what makes you think that the privatization of 80% of the Iraqi oil fields has much of a chance of helping anyone other than the corporations getting the contracts?
Seamus
New But nothing here says how that is to be done
only that revenues from oil be shared with the people equally.
Too much of today's music is fashionable crap dressed as artistry.Adrian Belew
New Reveues from existing production
Of which, only about 1/5 of the proven reserves are developed.

That leaves 4/5 to be exploited by outsiders - with only token payments to the citizens.



I4 NOW!


Impeach, Indict, Incarcerate, Inject
Bush, Cheney, Gonzalez, Rumsfeld, Rove, Rice
New It doesn't say what the royalities from new production
should be or but the way things have gone for the Iraqis during the war and subsequent occupation doesn't bode well for their getting close to their fair share.
Seamus
Expand Edited by Seamus March 31, 2007, 05:51:45 PM EDT
New You have a vivid imagination
because nothing of the sort is in what you posted.
Too much of today's music is fashionable crap dressed as artistry.Adrian Belew
New There's no guarantee the draft Iraqi oil law will pass.
[link|http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0305/p17s01-cogn.html|Christian Science Monitor commentary] by [link|http://www.csmonitor.com/commentary/francis.html|David R. Francis]. He writes on March 5:

With considerable fanfare, Iraq's cabinet last week announced approval of a draft law that would permit foreign investment in the nation's oil industry and provide for distribution of oil revenues among the regions and thus the country's main sectarian blocs.

Details of the draft are tricky. Revenues from current oil fields are to be shared according to population. Yet no recent census has been taken. The Kurdish region in the north and the provinces can sign new oil contracts, but these must be reviewed by an independent federal committee, not yet appointed. There is concern that foreign oil companies might try to get better terms by playing the provinces against one another.

But some oil experts are skeptical of the significance of the measure.

"It will not mean anything on the ground," says A.F. Alhajji, an oil economist at Ohio Northern University in Ada. As long as Iraq suffers from political instability, major oil companies will shy away. "The situation is so bad no one in his right mind wants to go there to be attacked or nationalized a second time."

Fearing the consequences, "The oil companies never supported the invasion," Dr. Alhajji adds.

[...]

To Alhajji, the "rush" to approve the draft law reflects the need of the Iraqi government and the Bush administration to show some success \ufffd "even if it is as cosmetic as the new oil law."

Zalmay Khalilzad, US ambassador in Iraq, stated the draft was the "first time since 2003 that all major Iraqi communities have come together on a defining piece of legislation."

Iraq's government hopes the nation's 275-member parliament will approve the draft before the end of May.

The legislation will be extremely controversial. Opposition is expected from the powerful Oil Workers Union of Basra. It staged strikes in 2005 objecting to America's plan to privatize Iraq's oil industry. A reviving Communist Party will oppose it. Much of the Iraqi press also objects to aspects of the law.

One sensitive provision allows "production sharing agreements" (PSAs) with foreign oil firms. In theory, Iraq would retain ownership and ultimate control of the oil in such a deal. A PSA would merely grant the firm or consortium the right to explore, develop, and sell the oil, while getting a share of the oil extracted. History, however, is full of "unequal" PSAs highly favorable to oil companies and less favorable to oil nations.

Zainy says that details of an oil contract are more important than whether it is called a PSA, a "production and development contract," or a service contract. He fears "corruption, presently rampant in Iraq" could affect contracts, wasting much of the nation's main resource.

[...]

During the 20th century, oil became the fulcrum of politics in the Middle East, with countries nationalizing their oil resources and winning better oil deals. The draft law "reverses everything that has happened in the Middle East since 1901," charges Rashid Khalidi, director of the Middle East Institute at Columbia University in New York. Implying that American occupiers have had much influence on the measure, Mr. Khalidi asks: "Does [Vice President] Cheney think he can stand against history?"

Khalidi's latest book, "Resurrecting Empire," spells out the history of foreign exploitation of Iraqi oil, noting that resentment over "insufficient benefits" to Iraqis led to the popularity of the Baath government and nationalization of the oil industry in 1975.

Khalidi doubts the draft law will pass parliament. "It is so manifestly against the interests of Iraq," he says. If it does, though, he doesn't expect the law to last. Presumably, an Iraq no longer occupied would seek better terms for any deal reached under the proposed law.

Alhajji notes that contracts signed "under duress" are not legally binding. After Iran nationalized its oil industry in the 1950s, British lawyers for the Anglo-Persian Oil Company (now British Petroleum) contested the action in the International Court in the Hague and lost, despite Britain's superpower status then.

In the future, Iraqi lawyers could similarly argue that any oil deal signed while Iraq was occupied was done under duress and thus was invalid.

After reading the draft law in Arabic last week, Alhajji says, "It is so broad and loose, it has no significance." Often, he says, nationalism in oil-rich nations rises during and after occupation by foreigners. That "will cause problems."


As slowly as politics works in Iraq, it's far from certain that the draft law will be enacted in its present form. Even if it is, it looks far from certain that they are simply going to sign over the oil fields to ExxonMobil.

With Venezuela's recent actions in the oil sector, it's hard to imagine international oil conglomerates investing in Iraq - a country that is far less stable and far more likely to cancel contracts or renationalize their industry than even Venezuela.

If Bush is counting on privatizing the Iraqi oil industry, he's likely to be disappointed. (I don't think he's counting on it, though I'm sure he would welcome it.) I think anything in Iraq that lets him claim a small victory would be welcomed.

"I'm very happy that my policy has been vindicated in Iraq! The Iraqi government announced today that they are united in their <whispered>opposition to my</whispered> proposed oil agreement! ..."

My $0.02.

[edit:] A few more details about the draft law and Iraq's oil industry are in [link|http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aB0rcoXPqBo8|this] Bloomberg story.

Cheers,
Scott.
Expand Edited by Another Scott March 31, 2007, 06:26:39 PM EDT
     Its about the oil - (tuberculosis) - (11)
         ??? Sort of like Alaska? - (bepatient) - (9)
             Sounds more like a record contract - (tuberculosis)
             Re: ??? Sort of like Alaska? - (JayMehaffey) - (2)
                 Not that different from before then - (bepatient) - (1)
                     thats different :-) -NT - (boxley)
             Don't take this the wrong way - (Seamus) - (4)
                 But nothing here says how that is to be done - (bepatient) - (3)
                     Reveues from existing production - (tuberculosis) - (2)
                         It doesn't say what the royalities from new production - (Seamus)
                         You have a vivid imagination - (bepatient)
         There's no guarantee the draft Iraqi oil law will pass. - (Another Scott)

A metric buttload of LRPDs.
143 ms