julianj,
Thanks for the kind words. The book is not yet avialable in the UK, so you will have to buy from amazon.com, or directly from the publisher. Here's the link if interested:
http://www.newsociety.com/bookid/3877
There are now 2 reviews on amazon.com, but the most thorough and detailed review was recently found on an unexpected website: Palestine Chronicle. Jim Miles does their book reviews, and I am grateful for his kind words re
Petrodollar Warfare.

I corrected one minor sentence in the 9th paragraph (my edit is in brackets [ ]). Anyhow, here's the full review for those interested in my little magnum opus:
http://new.palestinechronicle.com/story ... 0523163568
Petrodollar Warfare: Book Review
"As an explanation of economic forces around the globe today, Clark’s writing is clear and effective.."
Petrodollar Warfare – Oil, Iraq and the Future of the Dollar, William R. Clark. New Society Publishers, Gabriola Island, Canada. 2005. 265 p.
Reviewed by Jim Miles
PalestineChronicle.com
The average consumer of oil, if they read the newspapers, will understand that the world’s oil supply is currently being processed at peak capacity and that current infrastructures are running full out to meet the demand. The main common complaint is the seemingly excessive amount of taxes that the consumer pays on top of the actual costs of the oil – but the real costs of the oil, in massive U.S. military subsidies to grab and protect the global oil resources, would have us paying much more at the pump than we do now if that cost were passed on to the consumer (instead of being gobbled up by the enormous American debt). It can only get worse and it will get worse in potentially cataclysmic ways if the Untied States continues its unilateralist hegemonic attempts to control the oil supply but more importantly, to control the value of the American dollar as the World Reserve Currency.
That seems a long way from the local gas station but the connection is direct: I never believed the war in Iraq was about WMD’s or chemical weapons or al-Qaida connections; it never was about Hussein being a despotic ruler or about providing democracy to Iraq and the Middle East (a perverse reverse domino affect); and somehow I could never believe that it was about oil either. Whether a despot or not, the U.S. would be willing to buy the oil from anyone who wanted to sell it to them, and despot or not, a government would be willing to sell it to the highest bidder or to a previously signed contractor. William Clark’s excellent book
Petrodollar Warfare highlights that the real problem is the American dollar.
Not just the dollar, but the American economy as a whole is in trouble. As an explanation of economic forces around the globe today, Clark’s writing is clear and effective. He uses only the basic graphs and statistics needed to support the underlying themes. Those themes are several. First is the concept of Peak Oil, a period in which the oil fields globally are all producing at their maximum output – a situation I would suggest we are entering as of now. Next is his discussion of the amazing indebtedness of the American economy and how frail the support for the dollar is in domestic terms (manufacturing, job losses, personal debt) and international terms (foreign debt, imports of manufactured consumer goods, Chinese and Japanese holdings of American treasury bills). Thirdly the U.S. is governed by neo-Straussian followers who believe fully in the concept of global domination and the control of the “vulgar masses”. The media in the U.S., now reduced to five major corporate conglomerates is strongly criticized as it has lost its ability to work independently and think critically about U.S. policies and actions. These all come together in Iraq, a country that was doomed to be invaded anyway, but made it all the more worthwhile by abandoning the petrodollar to price its oil supplies and to price oil with the new euro.
It is a large picture, sometimes difficult to grasp, and is not easily represented in neoconservative terms of black and white, “with us or against us”, good and evil. There are far too many nuances to make it an easy straightforward argument, but the summation is clear, “The beginning of the 21st century will either be a disastrous period of oil related military and economic warfare, or an unprecedented and noble effort at international cooperation.” That seems fairly black and white, but the route there is not.
The introduction is quite clear about the war in Iraq, as it is “to prop up the US’ declining economic status as the sole superpower…for both macroeconomic and geostrategic considerations.” Further, it is “about retaining the dollar as the world’s reserve currency, and it is also about securing its continued use as a mechanism for effortless US credit expansion and global supremacy.” Another factor is the “message to OPEC and other oil producers: Do not transition from the petrodollar to a petroeuro system.”
In simpler terms, the dollar is supported by its use as the pricing mechanism for oil, similar to the previous standard when gold was used as the pricing asset. Every country needs oil, therefore every country needs the American dollar. If that were to change, the dollar would (and is) losing value to the euro, which, as demonstrated by Clark, is becoming the de facto world currency. As the dollar grows weaker, countries may wish to divest their reserves, essentially selling them off at lower and lower prices. As the U.S. no longer has a strong manufacturing base to support the economy (thanks to globalization) and must rely on consumptive consumerism to support the economy, the selling off of the dollar would be disastrous for the economy. There is more complexity to it than that, but Bush’s exhortation to Americans to keep shopping and keep flying after 9/11 reveals more truth than he probably wished.
It is a web of deceit and lies. There is a war against “terror”, an endless war that is conveniently located in the major oil producing area of the world. The media support the arguments of the government unquestioningly, and when revealed to be false, proceed on to the next unquestioned reason. Britain has not used the euro and is thus tied to the American dollar, explaining a bit of Blair’s enthusiasm for the war. The American government is ideologically controlled by a handful of people – Bush, Cheney, Perle, Feith, Bolton, Wolfowitz, (formerly), Rove – none with military experience but firm in their belief of military dominance.
It is a web of complex geopolitical manoeuvring. China and Japan hold the American debt and could easily send a dangerous signal to the Americans if they decided to sell off their investment. The Chinese Yuan is “becoming a de facto convertible currency the Asian Pacific economies” and “eventually the demographic and economic trends in Asia should create a consumer base that will eclipse the American consumer base.” The Saudis are working in concert with the Americans to provide mutual stability for the dollar. Iran has signalled that it will be moving to the euro and starting a competing bourse for oil sales. Russia has been invited to consider the euro as its pricing base for its oil sales, most of which go to Europe anyway. Although not dwelt upon, the “Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the central flashpoint for all Middle Eastern affairs, facilitates anti-American sentiments and potentially facilitates the recruitment of al-Qaeda members.” The home of the euro, the European economic union, now consisting of twenty-five countries, is economically more stable than the U.S.
The solutions to the problems all make common sense, but common sense is somewhat lacking in the current American political mainstream. Energy consumption is obviously a target and Clark suggests converting the majority of the military budget into a budget for remaking a rail based transit system throughout America. Primarily he advocates [disavowing-
WC] the preventative war doctrine, [while-
WC] promoting fiscal discipline, international energy projects, “real wealth creation” through “manufacturing and production”, energy allocation agreements with other countries as oil runs out, and global monetary reform to hopefully prevent the catastrophe of a major U.S. recession when the euro gains ascendance.
It is not a pretty picture, but it offers hope as well as calamity. While the U.S. may continue the course, it can be defeated economically if not militarily – a dangerous route to go but perhaps a necessity – a fine balancing act between military or economic global cataclysm. The hope is that there is room for change but that change must occur soon, as we are entering the Peak Oil period and the people of the world do not wish to live in a perpetual state of fear promulgated by a group of narrow minded, ignorant high priests, “we must not allow our government to cynically use the “war on terror” to frighten the citizenry in order to gain our complicity for more unprovoked oil-related warfare.”
While there are other books written on the topic of oil and the oil economy, and several are referenced by Clark,
Petrodollar Warfare serves as an excellent source of information about the American global position economically and militarily, and the realization that it is very thinly spread. This has been one of the more interesting and comprehensive reads of the year and the ideas within it need to be understood by the major players in the world, hopefully to take positive ameliorative action. At the same time, the average reader can gain good insights into the workings of the global economy without getting tied up in economic or political jargon and wishful thinking. In sum, a must read for everyone.
Copyright © 2003 palestinechronicle.com. All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners.