The Bush Agenda: Invading the World, One Economy at
a Time
We speak with Antonia Juhasz about her new book,
"The Bush Agenda: Invading the World, One Economy at
a Time." The book tracks the radical neo-liberal
economic program the Bush administration has tried
to impose on Iraq, which threatens to leave Iraq's
economy and oil reserves largely in the hands of
multinational corporations.
04/25/06 Democracy Now
CLICK PLAY TO LISTEN
* Antonia Juhasz, visiting scholar at the Institute
for Policy Studies. For years, she was Project
Director at the International Forum on
Globalization.
- Website:
http://www.TheBushAgenda.org
TRANSCRIPT: -
AMY GOODMAN: Our guest today is an author who has
been tracking the Bush administration's goals in
Iraq since the invasion. Antonia Juhasz has written
about them in a new book. It's called The Bush
Agenda: Invading the World, One Economy at a Time.
The book tracks the radical neo-liberal economic
program the Bush administration has tried to impose
on Iraq, which threatens to leave Iraq's economy and
oil reserves largely in the hands of multinational
corporations. It's an agenda, says Antonia Juhasz,
that the Bush administration is trying to bring to
all corners of the globe.
Antonia Juhasz joins us in our Firehouse studio.
She’s a visiting scholar at the Institute for Policy
Studies. For years she was Project Director at the
International Forum on Globalization. Welcome to
Democracy Now!
ANTONIA JUHASZ: Thanks for having me, Amy.
AMY GOODMAN: And congratulations on this book.
ANTONIA JUHASZ: Thank you very much. I appreciate
it.
AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about the leadership of
Iraq?
ANTONIA JUHASZ: Well, I would argue that the most
important member of the new leadership is Adel Abdel
Mahdi, who has been in every U.S.-appointed Iraqi
government post-the-invasion. He was the Finance
Minister of the interim government, the Vice
President of the transitional government and was
just named Vice President of the permanent
government. He was actually the man that the Bush
administration wanted to be the new prime minister
of Iraq. The deal that was worked out was that
another member of the Dawa Party, just like Mr.
Jaafari, would become prime minister, and then Mahdi,
who is a member of the SCIRI Party, would be vice
president.
It’s a position that allows him to continue to be
the most aggressive advocate of the Bush agenda in
Iraq, which I argue is opening Iraq -- continuing to
open Iraq to U.S. corporate invasion. Currently, 150
U.S. corporations have received $50 billion worth of
contracts, as you said in the introduction, to
utterly fail in reconstruction in Iraq, but the
money has still been granted. And Mahdi is the
person who advanced Paul Bremer's one hundred orders
in Iraq that opened up the economy. But more
importantly to the Bush administration, he is the
person who has most aggressively pushed their agenda
for a new oil law in Iraq, which would open up
Iraq’s oil sector, the vast majority of Iraq's oil
sector, to private foreign corporate investment.
AMY GOODMAN: You talk about the Bremer orders. You
spend a lot of time in the book on them. Can you
talk about Paul Bremer, Bremer's blueprint by
BearingPoint, the orders themselves?
ANTONIA JUHASZ: Yeah. You know, in the report that
you were quoting in the beginning of the hour, which
said that the reconstruction failed because of poor
planning, it’s a myth that there was not a post-war
planning done by the Bush administration. The reason
why it failed was because the interests it was
serving were U.S. multinationals, not reconstruction
in Iraq.
That plan was ready two months before the invasion.
It was written by BearingPoint, Inc., a company
based in Virginia that received a $250 million
contract to rewrite the entire economy of Iraq. It
drafted that new economy. That new economy was put
into place systematically by L. Paul Bremer, the
head of the occupation government of Iraq for 14
months, who implemented exactly one hundred orders,
basically all of which are still in place today. And
everyone who is watching who is familiar with the
policies of the World Trade Organization, the North
American Free Trade Agreement, the World Bank, the
I.M.F., will understand the orders.
They implement some of the most radical corporate
globalization ideas, such as free investment rules
for multinational corporations. That means
corporations can enter Iraq, and they essentially
don't have to contribute at all to the economy of
Iraq. The most harmful provision thus far has been
the national treatment provision, which meant that
the Iraqis could not give preference to Iraqi
companies or workers in the reconstruction, and
therefore, U.S. companies received preference in the
reconstruction. They hired workers who weren't even
from Iraq, in most cases, and utterly bungled the
reconstruction.
And the most important company, in my mind, to
receive blame is the Bechtel Corporation of San
Francisco. They have received $2.8 billion to
rebuild water, electricity and sewage systems, the
most important systems in the life of an Iraqi.
After the first Gulf War, the Iraqis rebuilt these
systems in three months' time. It’s been three
years, and, as you said, those services are still
below pre-war levels.
AMY GOODMAN: BearingPoint. Why have we never heard
of this company? Where does it come from?
ANTONIA JUHASZ: BearingPoint was KPMG Consulting,
but had to change its name in the wake of the Arthur
Andersen scandal, but BearingPoint picked up all of
Arthur Andersen's old clientele and is essentially
just the reborn KPMG. And BearingPoint, you probably
haven't heard of, though, because they work in the
back room. They write things like new economic
policies, but are not the people seen on the ground
implementing the policies.
Actually, there’s a wonderful story that I tell in
the book by a member of the Coalition Provisional
Authority, the U.S. occupation government in Iraq,
who says, ‘One day these people from this place
called BearingPoint came up and started telling us
about these economic policies that were so
unrealistic. I didn't know who they were and what
they were talking about.’ Well, what they were
talking about was an economic agenda that seemed
completely ridiculous for the people on the ground
who are looking at sewage flowing through the
streets and Iraqis saying over and over and over
again, ‘The most important thing we need is
electricity. Just electricity. Just give us our
electricity back,’ and failing to do it.
But this was BearingPoint, and they are still there.
Their contract was renewed. They’re still focusing
in particular on privatization of Iraq's state-owned
enterprises. That's almost the sole focus of their
current contract, and that contract goes, I believe,
until 2007.
AMY GOODMAN: You have a quote of Lakhdar Brahimi,
who is the U.N. Special Adviser to Iraq. A few years
ago, he said, “Bremer,” talking about L. Paul
Bremer, “is the dictator of Iraq. He has the money.
He has the signature. Nothing happens without his
agreement in this country.”
ANTONIA JUHASZ: Bremer became the dictator of Iraq.
His orders laid out the law. Now, probably the most
important thing to know is that that was completely
illegal under international law. The Geneva
Conventions are very specific about what an
occupying power should do. It must provide basic
security and services. It cannot change the laws or
the political structure of the country it occupies.
The Bush administration did exactly the opposite --
changed all the fundamental economic and political
laws and utterly failed to provide for the security
and the basic needs of the Iraqi people. What you
hear most often in Iraq today is people saying,
“Please just put us back where we were before you
came.”
AMY GOODMAN: We’re talking to Antonia Juhasz, author
and activist, wrote The Bush Agenda: Invading the
World, One Economy at a Time. Now, gas is over $3 in
many places. What's the connection?
ANTONIA JUHASZ: Well, here's the connection. The
Bush administration is the most beholden
administration probably in American history to the
oil and gas industry. This is the first time in
history that the President, Vice President and
Secretary of State are all former energy company
officials. In fact, both Bush and Rice have more
experience as energy company officials than they do
as government leaders. Cheney outbeats them. He’s
spent 30 years working for government. However, his
five years at Halliburton have been so profitable
that you might say that his Halliburton years
outweigh their oil years, because Bush was a very
bad oil company executive. But their links to the
oil sector are deep.
The oil industry provided more than 13 times more
money to the Bush-Cheney ticket in the first round
of elections than it did to his competitor, nine
times more in the second. And this industry has been
absolutely coddled by the Bush administration:
enormous tax subsidies, deregulation, and, I would
argue, a war waged on their behalf.
Now, there's two intimate connections between the
war and the price of gas. But first, I think it’s
very important for people to understand that the
vertical integration of the oil industry, which has
been absolutely exacerbated under the Bush
administration. For example, ChevronTexaco and
Unocal merging into one company, the completion of
Exxon and Mobil's merger, all of these little
companies merging into enormous behemoths, so that
you have ExxonMobil being the company that has
received the highest profits of any company in the
world, over the last two years, ever in the history
of the world. That is because of the vertical
integration and monopoly power of these companies.
That means that they control exploration,
production, refining, marketing and sales.
The price of oil at the pump is about 50% the price
of a barrel of oil, about 25% taxes, and then the
rest is marketing and just the price determined by
the company at the pump. So that means that about
18% to 20% is absolutely determined by the oil
companies themselves and governed by the companies
themselves. So they could reduce the price of oil
and reduce their profit margin, or they could jack
up the price of oil and increase their profit
margin. They have chosen to do the latter.
And one of the things that has helped them do that
is, first of all, the United States is receiving a
tremendous amount of oil from Iraq. Oil is down in
overall export and production, but not tremendously
so. We were -- at prewar was 2.5 million barrels a
day. We’re now at about 2 or 2.2 million barrels a
day. But 50% of that, on average, is coming to the
United States, and it’s being brought to the United
States by Chevron and Exxon and Marathon. The myth
of dramatically reduced supply has helped them
create an argument to the American public, which is,
you know, it’s a time of war, we’re suffering, gas
prices are going to go up, everyone needs to come in
and support this because this is war. Well, that's
just not true. The companies are using that as a
myth to help make it okay for them to receive these
utterly ridiculous profits.
AMY GOODMAN: In your chapter "A Mutual Seduction,"
you have a quote of Ken Derr, the former C.E.O. of
Chevron, 1998. I know his tenure well. It was the
time in the Niger Delta that Chevron was involved
with the killing of two Nigerian villagers, who were
protesting yet another oil spill of Chevron and jobs
not being given to the local community as they
drilled for oil. But your quote here says, “Iraq
possesses huge reserves of oil and gas, reserves I
would love Chevron to have access to.” And then you
follow that by a quote of John Gibson, Chief
Executive of Halliburton Energy Service Group, who
says, “We hope Iraq will be the first domino and
that Libya and Iran will follow. We don't like being
kept out of markets, because it gives our
competitors an unfair advantage.”
ANTONIA JUHASZ: I love it when they’re honest. It
doesn’t happen very often. Yeah, these companies
have been explicit, for decades, that they want in,
particularly to Iraq. The reason is obvious. Iraq
certainly has the second largest oil reserves in the
world, but some geologists believe it has the
largest, at least on par with Saudi Arabia. That's a
tremendous pool of wealth. And not just have the
companies been clear that they want access to that
oil, U.S. leaders -- for example, Dick Cheney, Paul
Wolfowitz, Zalmay Khalilzad, Donald Rumsfeld -- have
all been explicit for the past 20 years that what
the U.S. needs to do is gain increased access to the
region's oil, and most explicitly during the ‘90s,
Iraq's oil, that this is something that shouldn’t be
in the hands of Saddam Hussein.
The difference, going into the current Bush
administration, was that the rhetoric changed to and
the reality changed to not just we need a new
leader, we need a new -- a fully new political and
economic structure in Iraq, and we need to be in
that country to make sure that that structure gets
put into place. And that is exactly what they have
achieved, and now Halliburton, Chevron, Bechtel,
Lockheed Martin have profited tremendously from this
process already. Chevron’s -- the U.S. value of
Iraqi oil, imported Iraqi oil, has increased by 86%
between 2003 and 2004. Those profits have gone to
Exxon, Chevron and Marathon.
Chevron has seen its most profitable years in its
entire 125-year history over the last two years.
They are making out like bandits. They have been at
the forefront of advocating for decades for
increased U.S. economic access to Iraq. And now,
they are one of the few companies that are poised
once the new oil law is implemented. And that oil
law has its history in the U.S. State Department, in
the Iraqi Oil and Energy Working Group that formed
right before the war.
A member of that working group whose last name is
Aloum, and I'm blanking on his first name [Ibrahim
Bahr], became Oil Minister of Iraq. He's the man who
eviscerated all of the pre-existing oil contracts
that Saddam Hussein had signed. At the end of Saddam
Hussein's tenure, he had signed about 30 contracts
with companies from all around the world to give
them access to Iraq's oil sector. None of those
contracts were with the United States or U.S. oil
companies. The Cheney Energy Task Force, that met at
the very beginning of the Bush administration,
mapped out foreign suitors to Iraqi oil, listed all
of the companies, all of the countries, the fields
that they had access to, within a document that said
we need --the U.S. needs to get greater access to
Middle East oil.
AMY GOODMAN: Can you tell us who Cheney met with?
ANTONIA JUHASZ: Cheney met with -- thank goodness
for the Supreme Court, that ruled to release these
documents, because otherwise they were completely
secret. He met with Bechtel, Chevron, Halliburton,
Exxon, all of the largest oil companies and all of
the largest oil engineering companies, and they
decided we need to increase our access to Middle
Eastern oil.
Aloum then became Iraq’s Oil Minister.
AMY GOODMAN: Ibrahim Bahr Al-Aloum.
ANTONIA JUHASZ: Thank you very much.
AMY GOODMAN: From your book.
ANTONIA JUHASZ: From my book. It’s good to remember
what's in my book. Canceled all of the pre-existing
oil contracts. Now, Abdel Mahdi has said several
times, “The new oil law, when it’s put in place, is
going to be very good for U.S. oil companies.”
Chevron, Exxon, the other companies are sort of
hovering on the outside. They’ve signed what are
called “memoranda of understanding,” essentially
free services. Chevron has been training Iraqi
workers in the United States for years, mapping --
doing mappings, free services, so that they are
ready, when the permanent government is in place, to
sign contracts. And then, I believe, once those
contracts are signed, they will get to work, but
they need security. And what better security force
than 150,000 American troops. And I do not think
that those troops will leave, unless we all have
something to do about it, until the oil companies
are safely at work.
AMY GOODMAN: In our next segment we’re