Page added on August 13, 2014
The “no blood for oil” crowd has piped up with surprising speed and noisiness in the short hours since President Obama recommitted U.S. forces to the fight in Iraq.
Steve Coll, a writer for the New Yorker, suggests in a piece posted on the magazine’s website that “Kurdish oil greed,” whose partner Mr. Obama now becomes, has been a primary factor in making Iraq a failed state. That’s apparently because of the Kurds’ unwillingness to reach a revenue-sharing deal with Baghdad. For good measure, he refers readers to a Rachel Maddow video, featuring Steve Coll, that argues that the U.S. invaded Iraq to gets its oil in the first place.
John B. Judis, a veteran editor of the New Republic, in contrast is relatively sane under the headline “The U.S. Airstrikes in Northern Iraq Are All About Oil.” While nodding toward Mr. Obama’s stated humanitarian justifications, he insists oil “lies near the center of American motives for intervention.”
There are a few problems with this argument. Oil exists in the hinterland of Erbil, all right, the capital of a stable, prosperous and relatively free Kurdistan that President Obama now is trying to protect from the Islamic murderers of ISIS.
Guarding refinery equipment near the Kurdish capital of Erbil, July 14. AFP/Getty Images
But oil also exists in northwestern Iraq—in fact, vast amounts of oil around Mosul, whose fall did not trigger Obama intervention. Oil is in Libya, where the U.S. quickly took a hike after the fall of Gadhafi. Oil is in Canada, where Mr. Obama, who just fatally risked his legacy with his core admirers by dispatching forces to the Mideast, can’t bring himself to choose between his labor and greenie constituents by deciding to approve or veto the Keystone pipeline.
Oil apparently explains nothing except when it explains everything.
Another problem is that Americans are both consumers and producers of oil. So does the U.S. want high or low prices? A bigger producer in recent years, America presumably has seen its interest shifting steadily in the direction of higher prices. Yet acting to protect Kurdish production would have the opposite effect.
But then Mr. Coll especially is ritualizing, not thinking—and what he’s ritualizing is a certain leftist hymn about the origins of the 2003 Iraq war. Never mind that if the U.S. had wanted Iraq’s oil, it would have been vastly cheaper to buy it— Saddam was certainly eager to sell. Never mind that the Bush administration, after overthrowing Saddam, stood idly by while Baghdad awarded the biggest contracts to India, China and Angola.
It was not a Bushie but Madeleine Albright, in her maiden speech as Bill Clinton’s secretary of state, who first laid out the case for regime change in Iraq.
In the same 1997 speech, she explained, “Last August, Iraqi forces took advantage of intra-Kurdish tensions and attacked the city of Irbil, in northern Iraq. President Clinton responded by expanding the no-fly zone to the southern suburbs of Baghdad. . . . Contrary to some expectations, the attack on Irbil has not restored Saddam Hussein’s authority in the north. We are firmly engaged alongside Turkey and the United Kingdom in helping the inhabitants of the region find stability and work towards a unified and pluralistic Iraq.”
Madame Secretary did not mention oil any more than President Obama did last week. Of course, the catechism holds that, when politicians aren’t freely voicing their obsession with oil as Bush and Cheney supposedly did while cooking up the Iraq War, politicians are concealing their obsession with oil. In fact, oil was not yet produced in significant quantities in Erbil at the time. It was the peace and stability that Presidents Bush, Clinton and Bush provided, and that President Obama is trying to restore, that allowed the flowering of Iraqi Kurdistan, including its oil industry.
By now, America has invested 23 years in shielding northern Iraq from the suppurating chaos that seems to flow endlessly from Baghdad and its Sunni-dominated Western suburbs. It’s one of our few conspicuous successes in Iraq. Politics, in the best and worst senses of the word, drives every political decision. Despite his palpable lack of enthusiasm, President Obama knows surrender in northern Iraq would be an intolerable disgrace for his administration and U.S. policy. So he sends in the troops.
We come to an irony. The liberal habit of assuming everyone else’s motives are corrupt is, of course, an oldie-moldie, if a tad free-floating in this case. But the critics in question don’t actually oppose Mr. Obama’s intervention, the latest in our costly and thankless efforts in Iraq. They don’t exactly endorse it either. The New Yorker’s Mr. Coll especially seems out to avoid committing himself while striking a knowing, superior tone about the alleged centrality of oil, which is perhaps the most ignoble reason to pick up a pen on this subject right now.
5 Comments on "More War for Oil?"
paulo1 on Wed, 13th Aug 2014 8:27 am
After Obama received the Nobel Peace Prize, in hindsight for being the first black President and for talking up a good line….making people cry with hope and change on the horizon, he embarked on the same deadly path of intervention and bombing brown people. I suppose we are to believe it was/is for their own good and had nothing to do with oil or pipeline routes? Funny, south Sudan which contains Sudan’s oil was financed to revolt and yet so many other African basket cases left to rot and collapse? hmmmm, coincidence I suppose. If it isn’t about US getting the oil, it is certainly about influencing who does get the oil. For God’s sake, it is always about locking up energy supplies, stealing resources, or denying others. What happened when Japan was denied oil? Why did Germany attack invade the Caucuses? Why did Dick Cheney tell his ‘base’ the war would pay for itself and taking Iraq is basically a blank cheque?
The liberals might infer everyone’s motives are corrupt as the author states. However, events and feedbacks will display their motivations are just as corrupt as every other administration since Carter. At least Carter told the truth with his Doctrine, and tried to wean the US off their oil fix before this shit unfolded. And now here we are, with the WSJ saying otherwise.
By the way, hard to call the Dems liberals at any rate. They are still owned by the bankers and work for the elite. They still assasinate threats without due process. “We did torture some folks”, as if calling them folks some how sweetens the truth. If these corrupt political oligarchs think phasing in a minimum wage of $10.10 an hour over several years is a game changing social (liberal) revolution God help us all.
Paulo
penury on Wed, 13th Aug 2014 9:59 am
Paulo: What you said 100 per cent.
Dredd on Wed, 13th Aug 2014 10:06 am
The WSJ is known for its propaganda form of selective history.
When the empires went down @WWI it became the role of the U.S. to play Nanny for Oil-Qaeda because the empires were crippled.
One has to go back to the beginning to know the origin of any dynamic of this sort (NATO: Nanny America Turns Oily).
sunweb on Wed, 13th Aug 2014 10:59 am
I think with real research we could easily find that Iraq was on the plate way before 1997. As a starter read Yant, Martin. 1991. Desert Mirage. Prometheus Books. N.Y.
I believe there were papers written before Yant’s book on Iraq and oil.
edboyle on Thu, 14th Aug 2014 3:47 am
/sputnikipogrom.com/europe/germany/18208/russischer-appell
russian appeal to germans .bitter.