"THE BEST THING IN THE WORLD FOR BIG OIL"
… Bobby Kennedy and Palast on why Saddam had to go.
"This war in Iraq has been the best thing in the world for Big
Oil and OPEC. They've made the largest profits in the history of
the world. The interesting thing about your book is you show how
it was all planned from the beginning. The story is like a spy
thriller." -- Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Listen to RFK and Greg Palast on Iraq, a 20-minute conversation
about blood and oil, the podcast of 'Ring of Fire' from Air
America.
http://www.gregpalast.com/podcasting/radiointerviews/PalastonRingofFire_7-29-06.mp3
The following is part of the story referenced in their
discussion:
THE JERK: WHY SADDAM HAD TO GO
by Greg Palast
Excerpt from 'Armed Madhouse'
The 323-page multi-volume "Options for Iraqi Oil" begins with
the expected dungeons-and-dragons warning:
The report is submitted on the understanding that [the
State Department] will maintain the contents confidential.
For two years, the State Department (and Defense and the White
House) denied there were secret plans for Iraq's oil. They told
us so in writing. That was the first indication the plan
existed. Proving that, and getting a copy, became the
near-to-pathologic obsession of our team.
Our big break came when James Baker's factotum, Amy Jaffe, first
reached on her cell in Amsterdam, then at Baker's operation in
Houston, convinced herself that I had the right to know about
the plan. I saw no reason to correct her impression. To get the
plan's title I used a truly dumb trick, asking if her copy's
headings matched mine. She read it to me and listed its true
authors from the industry.
The plan carries the State Department logo on the cover,
Washington DC. But it was crafted in Houston, under the tutelage
of the oil industry -- including, we discovered, Donald
Hertzmark, an advisor to the Indonesia state oil company, and
Garfield Miller of Aegis Energy, advisors to Solomon Smith
Barney, all hosted by the James A. Baker III Institute.
After a year of schmoozing, Jaffe invited me to the Baker lair
in Houston.
The James A. Baker III Institute is constructed a bit like a
church or mosque, with a large echoing rotunda under a dome at
its center, encircled by memorabilia and photos of the Great Man
himself with the world's leaders, about evenly split between
dictators and democrats.
And there is the obligatory shot of a smiling Nelson Mandela
shaking Baker III's hand. (Mandela is not so impolite as to
remind Jim that he was Reagan's Chief of Staff when Reagan
coddled the regime that kept Mandela imprisoned.)
For tax purposes, it's an educational institute, and looking
through the alarm-protected display cases along the wall was
unquestionably an education. You could virtually write the
recommendations of the 'Options for Iraqi Oil' report by a
careful inspection of the trinkets of Baker's travels among the
powerful.
There is the golden royal robe given Baker by Kazakh strongman
Nazerbaev, the one who shared in the $51 million payment from
ExxonMobil -- a James A. Baker client -- and alongside it a
jeweled sword with a note from Nazerbaev, "Jim, there will
always be a slice for you." (I made that up.)
Who is this James A. Baker III that he rates a whole institute,
and one that will tell Iraq its oil future? Once Secretary of
State to Bush Sr., Baker was now promoted to consigliere to
ExxonMobil, the Republican National Committee and the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia.
In Houston, I found in Jaffe a preppy, talky Jewish girl with a
Bronx accent like a dentist's drill who, stranded in a cowboy
world, poignantly wanted to be one of The Boys. She thinks she
can accomplish this through fashion accoutrements -- she showed
me her alligator cowboy boots and rolled her eyes -- "for Rodeo
Day!"
Lucky for me and my (hidden) recorder, she did not learn from
Baker and the boys' Rule #1 for rulers: shut up.
So while Amy was in the mood to say too much, and before I got
into the details of Big Oil's plan for Iraq, I needed Amy's help
in finding the answer to the question that was just driving me
crazy: why did Saddam have to go? Why did the oil industry
promote an invasion of Iraq to get rid of Saddam?
The question is basic but the answer is not at all obvious.
We know the neo-cons' answer: Their ultimate target of the
invasion was Saudi Arabia, which would be cut low by a Free
Iraq's busting the OPEC oil cartel. But Big Oil wouldn't let
that happen. The neo-cons' scheme ended up an unnoted smear
under
Amy's alligator boot heels.
And we can rule out Big Oil's desire for Iraq's oil as the
decisive motive to invade. The last thing the oil industry
wanted from Iraq in 2001 was a lot more oil.
Neither Saddam's affection for euro currency nor panic over oil
supply 'peaking' ruffled the international oil industry. What,
then, made Saddam, so easy to hug in the 1980s, unbearable in
the 1990s?
Saddam had to go, but why?
Amy told me they held meetings about it.
Beginning just after Bush's Florida 'victory' in December 2000,
the shepherds of the planet's assets got together to plan our
energy future under the weighty aegis of the "Joint Task Force
on Petroleum of the James A. Baker III Institute and the Council
on Foreign Relations." The master plan makers included Paul
Bremer's and Kissinger's partner, Mack McLarty, CEO of Kissinger
McLarty Associates; John Manzoni of British Petroleum; Luis
Giusti, former CEO of the Venezuelan state oil company (until
Hugo Chavez kicked him out); Ken Lay of Enron (pre-indictment);
Philip Verleger of the National Petroleum Council, and other
movers and shakers crucial to such bi-partisan multi-continental
group gropes -- all chaired by Dr. Edward Morse, the insider's
insider, from Hess Oil Trading.
Their final report detailed Saddam's crimes. Gassing Kurds and
Iranians? No. James A. Baker was the Reagan Chief of Staff when
the U.S. provided Saddam the intelligence to better target his
chemical weapons. Weapons of Mass Destruction? Not since this
crowd stopped selling him the components.
In the sanitary words of the Council on Foreign Relations'
report (written up by Jaffe herself), Saddam's problem was that
he was a "swinger":
Tight markets have increased U.S. and global vulnerability
to disruption and provided adversaries undue potential in-
fluence over the price of oil. Iraq has become a key
"swing" producer, posing a difficult situation for the U.S.
government.
Now hold on a minute: Why is our government in a "difficult"
position if Iraq is a "swing producer" of oil?
The answer was that Saddam was jerking the oil market up and
down. One week, without notice, the man in the moustache
suddenly announces he's going to "support the Palestinian
intifada" and cuts off all oil shipments. The result: Worldwide
oil prices jump up. The next week, Saddam forgets about the
Palestinians and pumps to the maximum allowed under the
Oil-for-Food Program. The result: Oil prices suddenly dive-bomb.
Up, down, up, down. Saddam was out of control.
"Control is what it's all about," one oilman told me. "It's not
about getting the oil, it's about controlling oil's price."
So, within days of Bush's election in November 2000, the James
Baker Institute issued this warning:
In a market with so little cushion to cover unexpected
events, oil prices become extremely sensitive to perceived
supply risks. Such a market increases the potential lever-
age of an otherwise lesser producer such as Iraq...
I met with Falah Aljibury, an advisor to Goldman Sachs, the
Baker/CFR group and, I discovered, host to the State
Department's invasion planning meetings in February 2001. The
Iraqi-born industry man put it this way: "Iraq is not stable, a
wild card." Saddam cuts production, or suddenly boosts it,
playing games with the U.N. over the Oil-for-Food Program. The
tinpot despot was, almost alone, setting the weekly world price
of oil and Big Oil did not care for that. In the CFR's sober
language:
Saddam is a "destabilizing influence... to the flow of oil
to international markets from the Middle East."
With Saddam out of control, jerking markets up and down, the
price of controlling the price was getting just too high. Saddam
drove the oil boys bonkers. For example, Saddam's games pushed
the State Department, disastrously, to launch, in April 2002, a
coup d'etat in Venezuela.
This could not stand. Saddam delighted in playing cat-and-mouse
with the USA and our oil majors. Unfortunately for him, he
wasn't playing with mice, but a much bigger and unforgiving
breed of rodents.
Saddam was asking for it. It was time for a "military
assessment." The CFR concluded:
Saddam Hussein has demonstrated a willingness to
threaten to use the oil weapon to manipulate oil mar-
kets... United States should conduct an immediate pol-
icy review toward Iraq, including military, energy,
economic, and political/diplomatic assessments.
The true motive to invade Iraq, Saddam's "manipulation of oil
markets," was there, but not yet, in April 2001, the official
excuse.
Not surprisingly, the desires of the "Project for a New American
Century," the neo-con field of dreams, of remaking Arabia, was
not in the Baker Institute-CFR plan. However, the conclusion,
Saddam must go, matched the neo-con's policy demand, if for
highly different reasons. The Baker-CFR panel had a limited
concern: Get rid of the jerk, the guy yanking the market.
Morse was close-lipped about who saw and used the 2001 Baker-CFR
report, but Amy Jaffe could not help telling me that Morse
reported its conclusions in a briefing at the Pentagon.
More important, back in early 2001, the initial Baker-CFR report
(another participant tipped me) was handed directly to Vice
President Dick Cheney. Cheney met secretly with CFR task force
members (including Ken Lay) to go over the maps of Iraq's oil
fields. That, apparently, sealed it. Cheney took the CFR/Baker
recommendations as his own plan for dissecting Iraq, I'm told,
beginning with the none-too-thinly-veiled take-out-Saddam
"assessment."
And whose plan was it? I knew the membership of the Baker-CFR
group was Big Oil and its retainers. But I was curious to know
who put up the cash for drafting the extravagant report that was
so protective of OPEC and Saudi interests. This document was,
after all, the outline on which the Bush administration drew its
grand design for energy, from Iraq to California to Venezuela.
According to Jaffe, the cost of this exercise in Imperialism
Lite was funded by "the generous support of Khalid al-Turki" of
Saudi Arabia.
**********
Excerpt adapted from Greg Palast's just-released New York Times
bestseller, "ARMED MADHOUSE: Who's Afraid of Osama Wolf?, China
Floats Bush Sinks, the Scheme to Steal '08, No Child's Behind
Left and other Dispatches from the Front Lines of the Class
War."
http://www.GregPalast.com. May be reproduced without
permission.
Special thanks to investigator Leni von Eckardt for preferring
documentation over sleep.
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