DAWN - Features; November 14, 2002

Published November 14, 2002

US trying to frighten rivals into submission

By Humberto Marquez


CARACAS: Petroleum is not the central aim of the US plans for attacking Iraq, although war would shift control over the world’s energy markets and could undermine the power of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), note oil experts.

Iraq, one of the 11 members of OPEC, holds an estimated 11 per cent of the planet’s oil reserves.

What the United States is seeking, “before putting a hand on Iraqi oil, is to advance its war against terrorism and to ensure the Middle East as a free petroleum supply zone,” Alberto Quirss, former president of the Maraven company, a branch of the state-run Petrsleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), told IPS. Venezuela is the sole Latin American member of OPEC.

The threat of war heightened on Tuesday when the Iraqi parliament voted unanimously to recommend rejection of the resolution adopted Friday by the United Nations Security Council.

President Saddam Hussein has the final word on the matter, and he is head of Baghdad’s maximum decision-making body, the “Revolutionary Command Council”.

The UN Security Council demands Iraq’s full acceptance of its terms within seven days (as of last Friday) and a “precise and complete” statement of its nuclear, chemical and biological weapons and missile stockpile within a month.

According to the resolution, the UN weapons inspectors will renew their efforts “on the ground” in Iraq within 45 days, and will have another 60 days to report back to the international forum.

Iraq’s deputy prime minister, Tarik Aziz, charges that the ultimate aim of Washington’s policy in the Arabian Gulf is “to take over Iraqi oil.”

But White House spokesman Ari Fleischer maintains that “the only interest the United States has in the region is furthering the cause of peace and stability.”

In a conversation with IPS, Mahzar Al-Shereidah, a Venezuela- based oil industry analyst, says he believes “the main confrontation of the United States is not with Iraq. That is just a pretext, or an opportunity. The dispute is with the European Union, Japan, Russia and China, so that they accept Washington’s hegemonic role.”

“In the war in Afghanistan, the United States became a major actor in Central Asia, with military bases in countries that have ports on the Caspian Sea. It is deploying its power in the Gulf through the ‘petro-monarchies’,” explained Al-Shereidah, in reference to the monarchic regimes in the Gulf’s oil-producing nations.

“An operation that would allow the placement of a puppet government in Iraq would give the United States the keys to 65 per cent of the world’s petroleum reserves,” added the expert.

In Al-Shereidah’s opinion, that scenario “would mean the liquidation of OPEC,” the cartel encompassing the Gulf’s leading oil producers. The organization controls a third of the global petroleum supply and possesses 75 per cent of crude reserves.

The OPEC membership is made up of Algeria, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Liberia, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Venezuela.

According to the oil news agency Platts, Iraq holds reserves of 112.5 billion 159-litre barrels of crude, 11 per cent of the world total, putting it in second place, after Saudi Arabia, with an estimated 262 billion barrels.

Iran, Kuwait, Qatar and United Arab Emirates — fellow oil producers in the Gulf — hold combined reserves of 300 billion barrels, while Venezuela has 77 billion and Nigeria 24 billion barrels of crude.

Among the non-OPEC oil producing nations, Russia has reserves estimated at 49 billion barrels, the United States 30 billion, Mexico 27 billion, and China 24 billion barrels of crude.

Says former Venezuelan oil executive Quirss, “It’s clear that the region’s status as oil producer makes that part of the world more important for the war against terrorism. That is why the United States is in such a hurry — to prevent terrorism from contaminating the entire oil-producing zone around the Gulf.”

But Al-Shereidah asserts that “Washington is accelerating the conflict with Baghdad because it is an historic opportunity to lay the groundwork for a new global system that favours its position and subordinates its competitors” from Europe and Asia.

This new system of international relations is based on a quartet that is confronting Muslim hardliners in Asia: United States, Russia, India and China, says Giandomenico Picco, former adviser to the UN secretariat, in the publication The Middle East Economic Survey.

That group is a long way from the European and Japanese approach of consensus building and of solutions based on international law and negotiations, and instead is inclined to the use of force, according to Picco.

Another factor weighing in the analysis are the links of a portion of the US governmental cast, beginning with President Bush himself, a former petroleum executive and founder of the Arbusto Energy firm in 1978.

US Vice-President Dick Cheney led Halliburton, a company dedicated to digging oil wells, Interior Secretary Gale Norton served as an attorney for big oil companies, and National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice was an executive at Chevron, with one of the company’s tanker vessels bearing her name for several years.

Some of the actors in the world’s oil sector have not hidden their apprehensions. The head of the Russian company Zarubzhneft, Nikolai Tokarev, fears that an Iraq without Saddam will hand over the country’s entire oil and natural gas apparatus to the United States.

Baghdad has negotiated operating contracts with Russia’s Lukoil, France’s TotalFinaElf, and the China National Oil Company, among others. —Dawn/The InterPress News Service.